The science of the Renaissance and the problem of overpopulation

The 5th century B.C. philosopher C., Anaxagoras, was a central figure in the development of the science of life of the Greek classical era. The Harvard/NASA High Energy Astrophysics Division Library has published papers arguing that this science of life is based on fractal geometric logic. During the 5th century, Saint Augustine classified such pagan life science mathematics as the work of the devil. This effectively negated its resurgence until the present time when engineer Buckminster Fuller’s fractal life energy theories, derived from Plato’s banished mathematical research, were observed at work within DNA. Fuller’s work became basic to a new life sciences medical institute established by the three 1996 Nobel Laureates in Chemistry. Fuller’s worldview completely defied the fixed worldview’s understanding of universal energy. .

Plato had written that engineers who did not understand his principles of spiritual engineering were like warlike barbarians who were not fit to be called philosophers. As ethical mathematics has been divorced from the physics of the life sciences for almost sixteen hundred years, it is necessary to explain that for centuries well-intentioned aesthetic considerations were no real substitute for the lost principles of Greek ethical physics. This statement requires an authoritative reference, as it is quite offensive to demean the honest attempts of scientists who have endeavored to act or think ethically.

In 1990, Edward Husserl’s publication on pure logic listed mathematician Bernard Bolzano as one of the world’s greatest logicians. German scientists recently rediscovered Bolzano’s Theory of Science, which had been constructed by correcting the Aesthetic theories of Immanuel Kant. Through computer extrapolation, they discovered that Bolzano had based his correction on fractal logic. In 1991, the Cambridge University Press published the German scientist J. Alberto Coffa’s reaction to Bolzano’s correction of Kant’s work. In the book entitled The Semantic Tradition from Kant to Carnap. At the Vienna Station, edited by Linda Wessels, is the following paragraph: “Kant had not even seen these problems; Bolzano solved them. And his solutions were made possible by, and were the source of, a new approach to content and the character of prior knowledge.” Therefore, it can be reasonably argued that Plato’s spiritual engineering ethical principles should not have been banished from science in the first place.

Our current scientific worldview is barbaric because it is incorrectly governed by an energetic law that prohibits the existence of any science of life from being linked to the functioning of universal ethics based on fractal logic. We can now compare the old engineering logic regarding solutions to, say, the overpopulation problem, with the new biological science of fractal logic. Thomas Malthus’ famous essay on Population was based on the religious teachings of Saint Thomas Aquinas, whose central idea became an integral part of the second entropic law of thermodynamics, which now governs all of science.

Charles Darwin cited Mathus’s population paper as the basis for his theory of the evolution of the life sciences. A commonly accepted entropic solution to the overpopulation problem is that nature will find a way to cull the population. On the other hand, fractal logic now presents various models of reality that allude to new technologies by providing more ethical considerations.

Animal and vegetable fatty acids combined with minerals in prehistoric clays to form liquid crystal optical mineral soaps. When subjected to cosmic radiation, crystalline structures evolved, defying the logic of current entropic life science. For example, the growth of jasper crystals produces Mumford fractals. Conventional science accepts that a property of fractal logic is that it extends to infinity. Plato’s spiritual or holographic optical engineering principles seem to have been instigated by nature for some completely unknown future purpose. Human Swarm Technology alludes to various possibilities beyond the ability of modern science to even begin to comprehend, echoing Immanuel Kant’s inability to conceive of the problems that Bolzano solved.

The population may soon inherit ethical technologies anticipated by nature to allow the population to disperse into aspects of holographic reality that have infinite potential for human survival.

Professor Robert Pope

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