THE DHARMA LIFE FORCE AND SURVIVAL

     IN CONSTRUCTION  

  

    Central to this section is the full understanding of the relationship between

   Buddha Dharma and Curiosity, Creativity, Game Playing and Symbolic Sexuality.  

                            

We will begin by discovering how we can define living matter relative to all that is inanimate. We find that there are four Basic elementss all developed from the apparent energy Force of Life that generated eventually after the spontanous appearance and dissapearce of the sparks of life, the Impulse for Survival that we call the FEMININE PRINCIPLE.

                                               THE BASIC ELEMENTS

Differentiation

All living things are composed of one or more cells. Different cell have different "functions" within the organism. Each life form begins from one cell, which then divides continually. Cells changed their form and differentiated with different activity.

Organization with cells as a basis with memory.

There began then complex differentiation and gathering of cells which could perform more elaborate survival functions. These complex organization patterns are found in 

all living organisms. 

They arranged themselves at a very simple levels. In the human creature they formed symbiotic survival functions that we consider a whole organism. Greater group development through gradual evolution developed quite different life, ranging from the simple cellular organisms to the human creature.

This development depended clearly on a simple storeage and recollection process which we can term a primitive memory.

Growth

All organisms grow and change. Cells divide to form new evntual identical cell groups (and mutations), containing the germs of the growth pattern of their ancestors. 

Reproduction

All organisms reproduce in order to continue the species' life. This is combining genetic information (in sexual reproduction) or splitting into two organisms (in asexual reproduction) in order to create another of the same species. In sexual reproduction, the new organism will have some characteristics from the mother, and some from father. It may look like either of them, or it may not. In asexual reproduction, the new organism is an exact copy of the first. Sometimes, not every member of a species is able to reproduce. As long as others are (which we know they can, if they still exist today) then it does not threaten the species. (Except for mules, but don't worry about them, they are a bizarre anomaly.)

Mechanism for passing along traits to offspring Hereditary history

 

 

                                   MAINTENANCE  (FPP)

 

Metabolism

Use of nutrient matter; production of waste matter… metabolism

All organisms use energy. The sum of the chemical energy they use is called metabolism. This energy is used to carry out everything they do. Autotrophs (plants) use energy from the sun for photosynthesis, to make their own "food" (glucose). Heterotrophs (animals and humans) must ingest food for this purpose.

Use of energy; production of waste heat

Homeostasis

All organisms have stable internal conditions which must be maintained in order to remain alive. These include temperature, water content, heartbeat, and other such things. In a way, this has to do with energy use, because a certain level of energy must be kept within the body at all times. For this, obviously, humans must then ingest food on a regular basis. Not all conditions are for the body to maintain itself; though most are.

 

                          SURVIVAL (MPE) developed C.BA.E

Irritability

Response to stimulation

 

Adaptation

of internal conditions to external environment… 

curiosity… cretivity… game playing... union/belonging