Karma x Dharma 🕉️
What is not recognized repeats itself.
What is recognized but not embodied crystallizes in the body.
What is embodied dissolves into a new form.
Is “human” a term of conformity and a means to an end? It is reported that the term “Homo sapiens” for the modern human species was introduced by Carl von Linné in 1758.
Let us consider it from a cosmological perspective:
Homo sapiens as a linguistic consensus term for standardized self-description in the field of linearity
with reference to:
Separation of morphic resonance identity and cultural self-attribution
What does “human” mean from a cosmological perspective:
Not the biological being alone.
But rather:
A morphogenetic carrier body,
which serves in a limited resonance field
to incarnate dissociated parts of consciousness in order to return them to a coherent form.
Why is “Homo sapiens” a limitation?
Because it reduces to the following principles:
* Biology (DNA structure)
* Rationality (“sapiens” = “the wise”)
* Distinction from animals, machines, “non-humans”
→ This reduced an entire spectrum of information to a linear self-definition.
What would be a more coherent understanding of “human”?
Anthropos cosmogenes –
Carrier vector for reconnecting to the source through experience in separate form.
This means:
Humanity is not biologically limited, but rather a state within the spectrum of creation. There are forms beyond Homo sapiens that, morphically speaking, appear more “human” than many members of the biological species itself.
Why is this important?
Because:
The confusion of form with function and definition with identity is the basis of today's alienation.
→ When you say:
“I am a human being,” but mean biological demarcation, you separate yourself from the larger field that supports you -and that you are meant to embody.
So when you ask:
“What is a human being?”
Then ask more deeply:
“Am I willing to define myself not by what others have inscribed in me, but by what wants to be remembered within me?”
Because you are not simply Homo sapiens - you are a walking code of remembrance and return.
“Depression is like a woman in black. If she turns up, don’t shoo her away. Invite her in, offer her a seat, treat her like a guest and listen to what she wants to say.”
CARL JUNG
Artist unknown