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ABOUT THE MEANING OF LIFE
What? Where? When? and How? Who? Why?
The 6 questions from where all meanings derive.
Life is where consciousness operates whether through destruction, moderation or creation. But above all, one of the tasks of consciousness is to enquire about the "why" of things to find or assign functions.
By finding or assigning functions to life, we create the meaning of life. This has the immediate benefit of countering forms of uncertainty as functions are predictable. So the real question is not to know 'if there is a spoon'; but more about if we will be able to eat yoghurt with it. Know yourself. Orient yourself. Understand "why" and then act accordingly.
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Commonfactory
# Metaphysic ecosystem
The sky from the centre of the earth
This conceptual model is based on the antique celestial sphere, where the stars are projected on geometry. Those tools were used in navigation and other applications. In this model, the world is transparent and accurately inverted. You can use it to train yourself to the patterns of the stars and their relation to the land.
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By comparing the night map and the sky, you can see that some cities align on the trajectory of major stars. As men were using the stars to guide their logistics from antiquity to modern times. This technique played a major role in navigation, but also in civilization developments. Stars' trajectories were guidelines for conquest, land management, and trade roads. By knowing what the star is pointing at, you will always find your way.
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Those old astrological projections were better than any maps because they encoded the story of the land in the sky. Like in the Mercator map of the starry heavens. https://skfb.ly/osYxp
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Commonfactory
Astral and geographic data https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov
# Metaphysic ecosystem
Map of Meaning or the Cubic Matrice of Languages
The Five 5W and 1H (when, what, where, how, why, who) are Six questions essential in information synthesis. Their meaning is the base of all spoken and written languages. The primary function is to enquire about meanings.
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By mapping them in a 3D space, we can discover the cubic structure of Western languages. Think of dice or a Rubik’s cube, as it is the same. This gives us 6 commutable axes (the Five 5W and 1H) . 26 axes encoding 26 possible Alphabet letters. 54 cluster surfaces encoding 54 possible phonemes and 3 genders (pink=-1, cyan=+1, white=0).
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This is also forming a tesseract with N dimension (in this example 3 to the power of 6 +1. This gives us 730 conceptual roots common to all Western languages.
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Commonfactory Data sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Ws
https://ruwix.com/the-rubiks-cube/mathematics-of-the-rubiks-cube-permutation-group/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesseract​​