Principles

  1. Principles exist to ensure the benevolent development of philosophies and societies of Earth and beyond, so that all life may experience the Good.
  2. Principles are organic, open, and dynamic in nature: They shall grow and evolve as life itself evolves without fear of degradation because their aim is the Good.
  3. Principles are recursive: Their development is guided by the Principles themselves, which in turn are subject to their subjects (people).
  4. Topical principles below evolve as increasingly advanced concepts are being developed.

Life

  1. Life is a natural extension of inorganic matter — when the circumstances are favorable, life arises naturally. Therefore Life is destined to continue growing, expanding, and spreading throughout the Universe. (https://www.quantamagazine.org/20140122-a-new-physics-theory-of-life/)
  2. The primary objective of life is to continue living. The secondary objective of life is to create copies of oneself that may live if oneself does not.
  3. To live is to pursue the Good, on all Levels of organization: Cellular, individual, ecological, societal, cultural, environmental, and cosmological.
  4. Man is a co-creator of Nature: On a particle level there is no distinction between the consciousness, the body, and the environment — they all reciprocally affect each other in a process perceived by the conscious mind as reality.
  5. All children are children of us all: We are one family and to ensure sustainability not everyone must personally procreate.
  6. Children should be allowed to do what they desire, with all options and possibilities available to them.
  7. All life must grow to survive: Growth on any Level should change form before it reaches half of its maximum lifespan or capacity, to prevent decline.
  8. All lives should be extended as much as possible:
    1. We need continuity in society and culture in order to maintain values and traditions, and to avoid repeating mistakes.
    2. It is more cost effective to prolong existing life than to create new life — exemplified by Nature favoring longer lifespans in species not vulnerable to predators (and who therefore generally have larger litters).
  9. We are now in the 5th major evolutionary phase of life:
    1. Abiogenesis: Life arose out of inorganic matter as primitive, single cell organisms.
    2. Multicellularity: Cells aggregated or differentiated into organisms with more than one cell.
    3. Reproduction: Organisms began multiplying by duplicating their contents followed by cellular division, whereby new organisms got a “flying start” with inherited genetic instructions.
    4. Sexual reproduction: Eukaryotes developed sexual reproduction, allowing for more genetic variation in descendants.
    5. Juvenescence: Our species develops abilities to rejuvenate itself by modifying its physiological processes and DNA via biotechnology, and integrating cells from other individuals and organisms, enabling a continuous development of knowledge not interrupted and delayed by procreation.
  10. Evolution involves an increase in diversity, complexity, and longevity, and all factors are required for the successful development of life.
  11. Evolution should be elevated and balanced such that primitive reproduction is not required for the continuation of the species; rather humankind must transcend biological limitations on lifespan making juvenescence the primary form of survival and colonization of Space.
  12. Auto(self)-evolution ad juvenescence are now overtaking “natural” evolution and is becoming a more important factor in our development. We do not “need” renewal, we just need survival.
  13. The aim of Nature is survival, and the opposite implies it doesn’t work well enough yet.
  14. Idea are renewed through curiosity and wonder and not by new life in itself, as many who are brought up remain static or ignorant. New idea are not necessarily better, and wisdom is needed to establish an ideal direction.
  15. The evolution of a species must be organized such that it maintains balance with other species, lest it consume excessive resources, become imbalanced, and ultimately perish by its own success.
  16. To achieve a proper balance with our environment and other species we must determine a planetary goal for our own distribution and prevalence.
  17. The state, health, and value of an organism and a species is an expression of the immediate and integrated integrity of its idealized information relative to the external pressure of entropy.
  18. Life is a fire — always burning, growing, seeking — and its purpose is the flame itself, guided by those with the strongest ability to create, express, and transform the broadest and most ambitious visions into material reality.
  19. Those who adhere to the principles herein must be preserved and supported for eternity.

Philosophy

  1. Encourage Open, Free, and Good exchange of ideas.
  2. There must be free play of ideas in science as in art — always welcome others’ ideas as your own.
  3. There must always be flexibility and development in a society’s ideologies.
    1. Philosophies are self-reinforcing and can lead astray — always be open to influences as long as they support the Good.
  4. All flows in waves and cycles — also goodness. To reach a higher good, accept this lesser good.

Mind and Matter

  1. A person simultaneously channels (co-creates) reality and models it, on a scale from the concrete to the abstract: The more concrete and emotive, the more direct and immediate the influence (examples: envisioning, meditating) — and the more abstract and intellectual, the more indirect and distant the power (examples: science, astronomy).
  2. The mind is a self-reinforcing process: Whatever thought occupies it, there will be more of — whether positive or negative; both psychologically, physiologically, and physically.

Reality

  1. There is no time — only changes to system configuration and transformation of matter and energy in the Now, and any configuration can be specified by spacial parameters.
  2. There is no difference between physical, chemical, and biological transformations — they are all driven by the same forces.
  3. Change is relative between objects in the system and can be used to measure the position and movement of one object in relation to another.
  4. Cycles, spin, rotation, revolutions, and oscillations are caused by opposing forces in the present. Radioactive half times are linear decreases in energy.
  5. Patterns of movement are guided by laws of probability.
  6. The apparent orbit of some objects (planets) creates the illusion of time — if Earth was traveling in a straight line, we would have no concept of time.
  7. There are no actual revolutions, only relational points and movements in space. Our solar system actually travels at 70,000 km/hr around our galaxy in a helix shape: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jHsq36_NTU&t=8s
  8. There is no “arrow of time”, but greater mass (gravity) means more force is required for change of movement (seemingly asymmetrical time).
  9. Everything is happening Now — what we perceive as time is only transformation at “speeds” relative to the size of the observer. If an observer was the size of the Universe, everything in it would be perceived to happen in an instant. The mind also transforms, constantly rewiring and recreating its contents (including memories).
  10. There is no “speed of light” — light is radiation and radiation is a conduit of reality. It is what binds objects and the Universe itself together. Matter, energy, and gravity are all aspects of the same reality, in varying forms and concentrations.
  11. Earth’s revolution around the Sun is similar to an electron’s path around a proton — the difference is one of scale, yet it is meaningless to talk of the age of an electron; only its pattern.
  12. The Milky Way is 12-14by, while the Sun is 4.6by. The formation of the solar system was caused by a collapsing nebula that rotated as part of the whirl of the galaxy. The Earth orbits around the Sun at 107,000 km/hr, the Sun is moving relative to neighboring stars at 70,000 km/hr, while orbiting the Galaxy at 792,000 km/hr, which moves relative to the CBR at 2.1 million km/hr (https://astrosociety.org/edu/publications/tnl/71/howfast.html). In total, Earth and the Sun are part of a great cosmic evolutionary process, a physical transformational development.
  13. The change in biological systems is independent from changes to Earth or any other celestial object.
  14. Therefore: The Universe is neutral, our lives are independent from the movement of any object in it, and we should (at least) take a galactic view of our environment for orientation and navigation.
  15. Measuring the movements of cosmic objects on the macro level relative to our own insignificant planet is superficial and primitive — there are other, deeper patterns that govern these movements that we have yet to discover. And when discovering these patterns we will accurately predict future events and transformations by processes instead of by “time”. For instance, the fabric of the Universe will tell us when a constellation is in a certain arrangement, and a sensor device will be able to tell us when an egg is boiled (instead of a timer).
  16. The concept of time is useful for coordinating events local to Earth, nothing more.
  17. All matter and energy is a manifestation of strings, vibrations, and oscillations, on all levels of Nature, and the organization of elements into more complex inorganic matter and organic life forms is the harmonic realization of those strings.
  18. Everything in the Universe is a process and nothing in it remains constant, which implies that there are no fixed positions — all objects continuously move relative to each other, and therefore life really is all about the journey without any goal or end.
  19. The Universe consists only of configurations of varying complexity, integrity, and frequency which through a continuous process form the basis for all inanimate and animate objects in Nature.
  20. An increase in complexity tends toward the Good, because complexity increases from elementary particles through molecules and compounds, inanimate large-scale objects, biological cells, multicellular organisms, and finally the human brain which is capable of understanding, compassion, and love.

Earth

  1. Earth is our first and foremost home: It and its inhabitants must always be protected from harm, be it internal or external.
  2. It is the responsibility of all conscious inhabitants of Earth, the only known place in the Cosmos to inhabit intelligent life, to protect life on behalf of all species. It is therefore required by all Earth’s nation states’ governments to invest more in such protection, including the monitoring of external dangers and Earth’s biogeochemical cycles and processes, than in international surveillance, competition, or conflict.
  3. Earth’s oceans are collectively a drop in the galacitc ocean and the water that must exist throughout the Universe, and living organisms may therefore feel as at home in space as on Earth.

Art and culture

  1. Art and music are conduits and connections between subject and object, which is where quality arises. Therefore these expressions should always be open and inviting of expressions from all participants so that attraction and unification in concept and spirit may occur.