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MAN

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Title: MAN


1
  • MAN THE UNIVERSE, ANTI ENTROPY
  • The universe is characterised by a universal,
    anti-entropic form of underlying motion of
    qualitiative development.

2
3 key writings by Lyndon LaRouche
  • On Monadology
  • Project Genesis
  • The Project Before Us

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The universe is ruled by great principles, but
those principles are the children of the still
greater principles of universal changes. It is
the latter, higher order of change, which defines
the notion of a valid form of universal science.
It is the notion of a universe so defined,
ontologically, by this higher principle of
universal change, which constitutes a valid
science, which defines the meaning of fire in
Prometheus Bound. (OM)
5
  • Man changes the universe
  • ...the principled character of the Biospheres
    function is itself transformed qualitatively by
    the action of the Noosphere, such that the
    Biosphere no longer has fixed sovereign
    characteristics, because those characteristics
    themselves are being continuously transformed by
    the action of the Noosphere. (PGen)

6
  • The biological domain, the domain of the
    Biosphere, is contained within, and is
    subordinate to that Noosphere. This is to be
    understood as the expression of the Noospheres
    power to contain and modify the characteristics
    of the Bioshphere. With mankinds appearance, the
    Biosphere thus loses its independent functional
    characteristics (if, indeed, it ever had them)
    the Biosphere becomes, in every way, a
    phase-space contained within the Noosphere.
    (PGen)

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  • Mans knowledge of the universe we inhabit, has
    the character of a great scientific experiment,
    an experiment prudently premised on the
    demonstration supplied by physical economy. That
    just-stated principle, fairly stated, is that
    the validity of our estimable knowledge of the
    nature of our universe, is conditional upon the
    demonstration of the degree of mans wilful power
    to change that universe. I write thus, in the
    sense of the Prometheus Principle defended by
    Aeschylus our knowledge of the universe we
    inhabit is conditional upon our ability to
    increase mans wilful power to exist in that
    universe. Hence, our knowledge of the nature of
    the universe, is conditional upon proofs located
    in the power of the human mind, through discovery
    of true physical principles of wilful net
    physical economic progress of the human species
    as a whole, within the universe. (OM)

9
Monads
  • Simple not composite (1)
  • Therefore, no divisibility possible, These
    monads are the true atoms of nature. (3, 4)
  • Cannot begin or perish naturally
  • Can only begin or perish all at once (creation or
    annihilation) (6)
  • Have qualities and change continually, driven by
    an internal principle (appetition)
  • Though it has no parts there is plurality in its
    properties (11)
  • The passing state which involves and represents
    a multitude in the unity is called perception
    (or present state) (14)
  • Perception cannot be sought in any of the
    plurality of propertieswe should seek
    perception in the simple substance and not in the
    composite. Furthermore this is all one can find
    in the simple substancethat is, perceptions and
    their changes. (17)

10
  • Monad or entelechy signifies simple substances
    that have only perception. Souls are substances
    where perception is more distinct and accompanied
    by memory. (19)
  • Memory imitates reason but is distinguished from
    it. Animals have memory. (26)
  • Men act like beasts insofar as the sequence of
    their perceptions results from the principle of
    memory alone (Empirics). (28)

11
  • Heirarchy of monads
  • All monads, including Simple monads
  • Souls, where perception is accompanied by memory
  • Rational souls, or minds

12
  • 2. MOTION

13
  • the evidence is that the essential character
    of the universes trajectory is its motion that
    quality of motion is the essence of existence in
    our universe. That is to say, that the action of
    gravitation in, for example, the Solar orbit is
    action per se, creative action expressed in
    effect as motion. It is the existence of that
    anti-entropic action itself which is experienced
    as the infinitesimal in a Kepler-Riemann-Einstein
    map of the universe. (OM)

14
  • reflective acts furnish the principal objects
    of our reasonings. We think of being,
    substance, the simple and composite, the
    immaterial and God himself. (30)
  • A soul cannot unfold all its folds at once,
    because they go to infinity. (61)
  • Even physical change is constant All bodies are
    in a perpetual flux, like rivers, and parts enter
    into them and depart from them continually. (71)
  • What we call generations are developments and
    growths, as what we call deaths are enfoldings
    and diminutions. (73)
  • One can state that not only is the soul (mirror
    of an indestructible universe) indestructible,
    but so is the animal itself, even though its
    mechanism often perishes in part, and casts off
    or puts on its organic coverings. (77)

15
  • The alternative to reductionist fantasies of
    sense-certainty, is to consider physical
    space-time as a true continuum of
    existence-in-motion. That means the exclusion of
    the notion of something existing which must yet
    be moved, in favour of accepting the realisation
    of that motion, motion otherwise recognised as
    action in the sense of a continuing process of
    development, must be accepted as the
    intrinsically ontological quality of existence.
    This means dynamic existence (PGen)

16
  • 3. QUADRATURE THE INFINITESIMAL

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  • there is no scientific meaning of the term
    infinitesimal except that defined by Kepler for
    the Earth orbit which can not be defined by the
    methods of quadrature used by Archimedes, and
    defined as Leibniz also uses the same concept in
    defining the ontological, rather than Cartesian
    meaning of the term infinitesimal. It is the
    latter alternative which must be defined in these
    pages. (OM)

19
  • The infinitesimal of the Leibniz calculus,
    which he derived from Keplers discovery of
    universal gravitation, is an expression of
    insurgent motion of physical development, and
    expression of anti-entropic universal principle.
  • The quality of being infinitesimal originates
    in the relative scale of the action (in the case
    of Keplers discovery) of that principle itself,
    as being relatively boundlessly universal and
    efficient (the actual infiniteinfinite not in
    respect to its instantaneous current state, but
    its future development.) This principle is
    expressed in the infinitesimal curvature of
    physical space-time at any instant.
  • In that sense of things, the universe is
    infinitely dense in its motion of change. The
    evidence that this sense of change is also
    associated with qualitative development in the
    universe, defines the principle of action in the
    universe as anti-entropic. A law of entropy is
    simply a fraud. (OM)

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22
  • The smallness of the Leibniz infinitesimal, is
    the limitlessly infinitesimal expression of, a
    shadow of the action of an infinite (eg
    limitless) universal physical principle. (It
    does not connote Euclidean or Cartesian
    smallness!) (PBU)

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24
  • 64. Thus each organised body of a living being is
    a kind of divine machine or natural automaton,
    which infinitely surpasses all artificial
    automata. For a machine constructed by man's art
    is not a machine in each of its parts. For
    example, the tooth of a brass wheel has parts or
    fragments which, for us, are no longer artificial
    things, and no longer have any marks to indicate
    the machine for whose use the wheel was intended.
    But natural machines, that is, living bodies, are
    still machines in their least parts, to infinity.
    That is the difference between nature and art,
    that is, between divine art and our art.

25
  • 65 . And the author of nature has been able to
    practice this divine and infinitely marvelous
    art, because each portion of matter is not only
    divisible to infinity, as the ancients have
    recognised, but is also actually subdivided
    without end, each part divided into parts having
    some motion of their own otherwise, it would be
    impossible for each portion of matter to express
    the whole universe.

26
  • 66. From this we see that there is a world of
    creatures, of living beings, of animals, of
    entelechies, of souls in the least part of
    matter.
  • 67. Each portion of matter can be conceived as a
    garden full of plants, and as a pond full of
    fish. But each branch of a plant, each limb of an
    animal, each drop of its humors, is still another
    such garden or pond.

27
  • 68. And although the earth and air lying between
    the garden plants, or the water lying between the
    fish of the pond, are neither plant nor fish,
    they contain yet more of them, though of a
    subtleness imperceptible to us, most often.

28
  • 69. Thus there is nothing fallow, sterile, or
    dead in the universe, no chaos and no confusion
    except in appearance, almost like it looks in a
    pond at a distance, where we might see the
    confused and, so to speak, teeming motion of the
    fish in the pond, without discerning the fish
    themselves.

29
  • 70. Thus we see that each living body has a
    dominant entelechy, which in the animal is the
    soul but the limbs of this living body are full
    of other living beings, plants, animals, each of
    which also has its entelechy, or its dominant
    soul.

30
  • 4. THE IMMORTAL MIND

31
The cause of our existence
  • There is an infinity of past and present shapes
    and motions that enter into the efficient cause
    of my present writing, and there is an infinity
    of small inclinations and dispositions of my
    soul, present and past, that enter into its final
    cause. (36)
  • And that is why the ultimate reason of things
    must be in a necessary substance in which the
    diversity of changes is only eminent
    explained?, as in its source. This is what we
    call God. (38)
  • the necessary being, a being that has the
    reason of its existence in itself. (45)

32
  • Leibniz says that the only way one monad can
    affect another is via the whole. (Via God) (51)
  • Leibniz explains Gods universe as one which
    allows for maximum possible development of
    perfection, this universal harmony results in
    every substance expressing exactly all the others
    through the relation it has to them. (59)
  • God, in regulating the whole, had regard for
    each part, and particularly for each monad, and
    since the nature of the monad is representative,
    nothing can limit it to represent only a part of
    things. (limitless but bounded, they are
    limited and differentiated by the degrees of
    their distinct perceptions.) (60)
  • each created monad represents the whole
    universe. (62)

33
  • City of God.
  • Souls are living mirrors or images of the
    universe of creatures, but minds are also images
    of the divinity itself, or of the author of
    nature, capable of knowing the system of the
    universe, and imitating something of iteach mind
    being like a little divinity in its own realm.
    (83)
  • That is what makes minds capable of entering
    into a kind of society with God (84)

34
  • From this it is easy to conclude that the
    collection of all minds must make up the city of
    God (85) a moral world within the natural
    world, and the highest and most divine of Gods
    works. (86)

35
  • If we could understand the order of the universe
    well enough, we would find that it surpasses all
    the wishes of the wisest, and that it is
    impossible to make it better than it is. (90)

36
  • The vehicle we inhabit, temporarily, the animal
    body which serves as the temporary conveyance of
    the soul we already are and shall be, is mortal,
    animal in many important features of its mortal
    existence. However, there is clearly a higher
    domain, a domain in which temporal relations, as
    people today define them, are surpassed by what
    may be described fairly as an absolutely
    non-linear domain of physical space-time action.
    (PBU)
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