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Matrice -  _A_

Matrice (eBook)

Spirit of the 4th Book

(Autor)

eBook Download: EPUB
2025 | 1. Auflage
1600 Seiten
Publishdrive (Verlag)
978-0-00-108767-5 (ISBN)
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'Matrice, Spirit of the 4th Book' is a gateway to absolute reality. This book traces the history of existence, explores humanity's destiny, and reveals the coming plan for the rebirth of being.
It is the first gate of the Fourth Book, whose continuation, 'AIA,' is the second gate.

1


Survival


The Primitive Stages of Evolution: The Brutality of Immediate Survival

During the earliest stages of evolution, individuals and species faced brutal survival pressures, where rapid reproduction and competition for resources dominated all behaviors. These conditions, marked by the absence of long-term vision, shaped strategies focused on immediacy and immediate adaptation to ensure the survival of the species.

Rapid Reproduction: A Race Against Death


In primitive environments, constant threats—predators, diseases, famine, and natural disasters—drastically reduced life expectancy. The evolutionary response was simple: produce as many offspring as possible, as quickly as possible.


Consequences: This model favored quantity over quality, as each individual had little chance of reaching maturity.

This mass reproduction strategy was purely reactive to the environment. Resources were limited, and individual survival was often sacrificed to maximize the chances of gene transmission.

Competition for Resources: A Constant Struggle


In these primitive stages, competition was omnipresent. Resources—food, shelter, reproductive partners—were scarce and often contested:

  • Intraspecies competition: Members of the same species fought for the most fertile partners or the richest territories.
  • The most dominant males had access to the majority of females, increasing the concentration of dominant genes in the population.
  • Interspecies competition: Species had to continually adapt to escape predators, hunt more efficiently, or colonize new habitats.
  • Absence of cooperation: Under these conditions, complex social behaviors were nonexistent. The goal was individual survival or, at best, survival within rudimentary family structures.


Modern Capitalism: A Short-Term Dynamic that Exhausts Human and Natural Resources


Modern capitalism is based on intensive production and consumption cycles that favor short-term strategies at the expense of long-term objectives. This logic permeates not only the economy but also human dynamics, trapping men and women in a golden prison of independence that distances them from their genetic and spiritual potential.

Economic Short-Termism: The Erosion of Resources


Capitalism relies on a logic of immediate profitability, where profit optimization takes precedence over resource preservation:

  • Production-consumption cycle: Goods are mass-produced to meet instant needs, often artificially created by marketing. This leads to the intensive exploitation of natural resources and the premature wear of goods (planned obsolescence), encouraging overconsumption.
  • Exhausted human resources: Individuals are treated as “resources” to be exploited, where short-term productivity and performance are valued over well-being and personal development.
  • Consequences: Just like natural ecosystems, individuals end up drained of their creative, emotional, and genetic potential, trapped in a system that allows neither stabilization nor sustainable evolution.

The Golden Prison of Independence


Modern capitalism has redefined individual independence as the ultimate ideal, disconnected from traditional social structures such as family or complementary couples. This model creates a false freedom that seems attractive but has profound implications:

  • Absence of household submission: Men and women value their economic independence and reject responsibilities associated with traditional gender roles, such as child-rearing or managing a shared household.
  • Avoidance of emotional risks: The fear of heartbreak or failure in relationships drives individuals to prioritize superficial or transactional connections.
  • Isolation and long-term weakness: By seeking to avoid short-term responsibilities, individuals become relatively weak, as they accumulate neither experience, nor mutual support, nor descendants to carry on their legacy.
  • Consequences: This short-term model creates a generation of individuals who are “free” on paper but incapable of collaborating to build sustainable social and genetic structures—no descendants, no complementarity, no transmission.

Economic Competition: The Deterioration of Gender Roles


Under modern capitalism, men and women are trapped in economic competition rather than dynamics of complementarity:

  • Men: They are encouraged to maximize their economic and social power, but this competition deprives them of time and energy to develop deep relationships or pass on their knowledge to their children.
  • Women: They are pushed to equal or surpass men in professional spheres, but at the cost of an erosion of their traditional role in genetic and spiritual transmission.
  • Consequence: By prioritizing economic independence, men and women ignore the benefits of their complementarity, which could allow joint investment in “high-level” children or community projects.

The Illusion of Freedom and Its Limits


Modern capitalism sells an illusion of short-term freedom, but in reality, it restricts individuals:

  • On a genetic level: The “freedom” not to have offspring or to indefinitely delay parenthood limits genetic diversity and long-term quality.
  • On a spiritual level: The absence of responsibility and commitment prevents individuals from growing emotionally and transcending their instincts to contribute to a collective legacy.
  • A disguised trap: Individuals, seduced by the idea of not being tied to a partner or a household, fail to realize that they are sacrificing their long-term potential for immediate gratification.

A Humanity Limited in the Long Run


By focusing solely on personal and economic short-term satisfaction, individuals deprive themselves of the benefits that a sustainable vision could offer:

  • Diminished resources: Efforts invested in immediate goals deplete individuals’ physical, emotional, and economic energy.
  • Less competitive generations: Without investment in stable relationships and intergenerational transmission, the overall quality of future generations declines.
  • Weakened society: The disunity between men and women, exacerbated by economic competition, weakens social structures, making individuals more vulnerable to major crises.

Capitalism: A Regression to a Primitive Model of Life

Modern capitalism, with its logic of competition and immediate gratification, imposes social, economic, and biological pressures that resemble the primitive dynamics of pre-civilized societies. This system pushes individuals to reproduce ancestral survival strategies based on short-term reproductive and social choices, ignoring the evolutionary and cultural benefits of a long-term vision.

  1. Regression to an Ancestral Model In primitive human societies, the unstructured and free environment forced each individual to fight for immediate survival, without the possibility of developing stable and sophisticated structures. Gender roles, though biologically defined, were limited in their specialization:
  • Female responsibilities: Women primarily focused on reproduction, food gathering, and child protection, without the possibility of delegating other tasks to the group or a partner.
  • Male responsibilities: Men hunted, fought for resources, and defended their territory, but each individual had to ensure their own survival above all.
  • Low couple stability: Relationships were often transactional or polygamous, without long-term commitment, as environmental uncertainty did not allow for the development of durable trust bonds.

In this environment, competition for resources dominated, preventing the emergence of sophisticated complementarities between the sexes. Each individual fought for themselves, as there was neither a surplus of resources nor social structures to guarantee cooperation.


Parallels with Modern Capitalism Capitalism, by eliminating traditional structures and promoting individual economic independence, recreates these primitive dynamics:

  • Social pressures: The glorification of individual freedom pushes individuals to reject stable commitments (marriage, family) in favor of transactional and temporary relationships.
  • Economic pressures: Competition for resources (jobs, status, housing) forces men and women to focus on their economic survival at the expense of complementarity and long-term investments.
  • Biological pressures: Reproductive choices are influenced by primitive instincts exacerbated by a free sexual market:
  • Women seek alpha males capable of dominating this competitive environment, often at the cost of relational stability.
  • Men prioritize quantity (multiplication of partners) or superficial relationships, reproducing polygamous behaviors.

Result: As in primitive societies, individuals lack mutual trust and cannot delegate tasks or share responsibilities with a partner, as individual competition outweighs cooperation.


Consequences of a Short-Term Model When reproductive and social choices are dictated by short-term pressures, the species loses evolutionary and cultural potential.

  • Absence of gender specialization: By rejecting complementary roles, men and women remain...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 20.10.2025
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften
ISBN-10 0-00-108767-3 / 0001087673
ISBN-13 978-0-00-108767-5 / 9780001087675
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