Reflecting on Ocean Fragmentation and Reality Perception
rswfire conducts a late-night reflection on how humans fragment reality, using the ocean as a primary example. He describes childhood observations of globes showing one continuous body of water, contrasted with educational systems that divide it into separate named oceans (Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Arctic). He argues this represents a fundamental fragmentation of reality that begins in childhood education, where children are taught not to trust their direct observations. The speaker emphasizes that there is actually only one ocean that has existed for hundreds of millions of years, shapes the planet continuously, and will outlast humanity. He connects this fragmentation to broader systemic issues, suggesting it leads to unsustainable systems and current global problems. The transmission concludes with the assertion that objective reality doesn't care about human opinions but humans should care about understanding it accurately.
Nov 29, 2024
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Oregon State Parks > Humbug Mountain
42.68901, -124.43818
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25% match