When the first atom was split successfully, in the Manhattan project(rivaled only by the NASA's moon mission in terms of investment of resources - money, manpower, intellect;) the lead scientist Dr. Robert Oppenheimer quoted a verse from the Gita, which the lord Shri Krishn says to Arjun after having revealed his true form. It goes - "I've become death, the destroyer of the world's."
The cycles of creation and destruction are pretty much the cause as well as consequence of all things humane, for example: emotions. Strangely, the preprogrammed mind automatically thinks of consequence as a form of suffering, as against the reason preceded by cause, because we look forward to the future so as to hedge against disapproval from what our current level of intellect perceives our society to be.
The similarities of intellect between what Arjun thought and even felt, are no different than what we feel today! We are still as foolish as we were ~5000 years ago. Man is still confounded by what lies within himself just as much as what lay beyond his imagination. If you find it hard to believe this, just try to imagine and come up with something completely new, intoto! You just can't.
All drama about ideation is just a flawed notion of copying what is already there in an aspect which seemingly has not been used before. All that is created must perish then all which has perished should be recycled, isn't it? If we were to value the total life on this planet earth and think of a root for all of them, call them souls, then I suspect the resultant over all sum is likely to be a constant forever. Maybe not a universal constant, but a constant in the world we are aware of.
If S=soul, E=earth, X=value\# imagined, T=defined quantum of time, K=constant
then x(s).e/t=k
Which is why, when the total sum of all parts breaks the equilibrium of the constant, everything has to be reset back to original and history repeats itself.
The collective sum of all conscious parts of life(species) is always constant in any given realm of a complete world with a full mutation life cycle.
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