Zach Bush
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
A monocrop over 10 million hectares destroys the intelligence and life force within the biosphere within that area. And so certainly isolation or monoculture, the monotony of the way in which humans move typically is to destroy biodiversity and try to create a scaled version of a monopoly or monoculture. That that era needs to end.
But our understanding of what emerges as an alternative to that or by nature's design has been shifting. And so I'm blessed to be helping a group of us come off the ground with the Institute of Natural Law for the last couple of years. And we've been really investigating that. What is the systems of natural law that determine physics, biology, and ultimately human systems?
But our understanding of what emerges as an alternative to that or by nature's design has been shifting. And so I'm blessed to be helping a group of us come off the ground with the Institute of Natural Law for the last couple of years. And we've been really investigating that. What is the systems of natural law that determine physics, biology, and ultimately human systems?
But our understanding of what emerges as an alternative to that or by nature's design has been shifting. And so I'm blessed to be helping a group of us come off the ground with the Institute of Natural Law for the last couple of years. And we've been really investigating that. What is the systems of natural law that determine physics, biology, and ultimately human systems?
And the first line of natural law is ultimately sovereignty. And I think that that's what we've been reaching for. And perhaps mistakenly, using this word independent or freedom as a concept. And there is no such thing as independence, as you say. Independence leads to isolation, isolation to chaos. And so that's the second law of thermodynamics.
And the first line of natural law is ultimately sovereignty. And I think that that's what we've been reaching for. And perhaps mistakenly, using this word independent or freedom as a concept. And there is no such thing as independence, as you say. Independence leads to isolation, isolation to chaos. And so that's the second law of thermodynamics.
And the first line of natural law is ultimately sovereignty. And I think that that's what we've been reaching for. And perhaps mistakenly, using this word independent or freedom as a concept. And there is no such thing as independence, as you say. Independence leads to isolation, isolation to chaos. And so that's the second law of thermodynamics.
And so ultimately, this concept of connectivity is critical, but there may be a slight difference between the concept of interdependence, the word dependence suggesting that one thing can't exist without the other, to a concept of sovereignty, And then once you get sovereignty at the atomic level or the cellular level, you immediately create polarity.
And so ultimately, this concept of connectivity is critical, but there may be a slight difference between the concept of interdependence, the word dependence suggesting that one thing can't exist without the other, to a concept of sovereignty, And then once you get sovereignty at the atomic level or the cellular level, you immediately create polarity.
And so ultimately, this concept of connectivity is critical, but there may be a slight difference between the concept of interdependence, the word dependence suggesting that one thing can't exist without the other, to a concept of sovereignty, And then once you get sovereignty at the atomic level or the cellular level, you immediately create polarity.
And so an electron will always have the proton, the proton will always have the neutron. And so there's these constellations of charges that form within the matrix of our physical reality that are held together by the sovereignty of each individual. And no point does the proton probably feel dependent upon the neutron. Instead, it's joy to share space with the neutron.
And so an electron will always have the proton, the proton will always have the neutron. And so there's these constellations of charges that form within the matrix of our physical reality that are held together by the sovereignty of each individual. And no point does the proton probably feel dependent upon the neutron. Instead, it's joy to share space with the neutron.
And so an electron will always have the proton, the proton will always have the neutron. And so there's these constellations of charges that form within the matrix of our physical reality that are held together by the sovereignty of each individual. And no point does the proton probably feel dependent upon the neutron. Instead, it's joy to share space with the neutron.
You know, there's this sense of connectivity as a result of the polarity. And so as we think about that as social systems or human design, It inspires us to think past the concepts of independence or freedom towards this concept of sovereignty of each individual.
You know, there's this sense of connectivity as a result of the polarity. And so as we think about that as social systems or human design, It inspires us to think past the concepts of independence or freedom towards this concept of sovereignty of each individual.
You know, there's this sense of connectivity as a result of the polarity. And so as we think about that as social systems or human design, It inspires us to think past the concepts of independence or freedom towards this concept of sovereignty of each individual.
And once you have sovereignty, then instead of polarization, we get polarity and understanding that your opposite is actually really critical to your stability and your self-expression ultimately. And so while you're not dependent on that other thing, sodium is always sodium. If there's chloride, not chloride, sodium is always sodium.
And once you have sovereignty, then instead of polarization, we get polarity and understanding that your opposite is actually really critical to your stability and your self-expression ultimately. And so while you're not dependent on that other thing, sodium is always sodium. If there's chloride, not chloride, sodium is always sodium.
And once you have sovereignty, then instead of polarization, we get polarity and understanding that your opposite is actually really critical to your stability and your self-expression ultimately. And so while you're not dependent on that other thing, sodium is always sodium. If there's chloride, not chloride, sodium is always sodium.
But if you can give it an opportunity to bond to chloride, now it's salt. And you get this beautiful thing that is necessary for oceans to live and for life to breathe and all these beautiful things. But at no point does one lose the identity of the other. And the concept of interdependence