Just common sense…

Foundations Within Foundations

What makes us human? …ethical? What gives us hope, depth, perspective?
Deep within the fabric of life there is an energy, an abiding thrust to make things better, more perfect.  That is the cornerstone of business, but much more.

Simple logic tells us that there are three forms within functions that define an increasingly perfected state within an experience:

  • The first form that defines our humanity is order and its most basic function, a simple perfection, creates continuity.
  • The second form is a relation and its function creates symmetry.
  • The third form is dynamics and its perfection, a complex function, is harmony.

All scientific and religious assertions that seek to understand and define the universal, begin with the same first principle and evolve within their own understanding and language to the second and third. Yet, the starting point -continuity- necessarily tells us that everything is necessarily related.

This is also the basis of the value chain. The more perfect a moment or an experience is, OR the more perfected a thing or system is, the more valuable it becomes.  And, in the deepest sense of the word,  it also becomes an expression or manifestation of love.

Thus, we have the beginnings of business (and economics), ethics and morality.

Any assertion that counters life’s evolving perfections is not religion (at best, it’s a cult*);
it is also not business  (it’s exploitation or a bad company); certainly it is not good government; and most often, it is not even good science.

There are scientific endeavors that observe, quantify and qualify that which is fundamentally based on discontinuities or chaos, but these studies require the inherent continuities of mathematics and constants-and-universal  to grasp the nature of that discontinuity.  –BEC

These principles in action  encapsulated within the logo  Application by Ben Franklin
*For a review of this language applied to religions   More

Please NoteThis simple description of the nature of life evolves from work in 1979 when Camber worked with 77 of the world’s leading, living scholars who all addressed the questions.  The initial focus was on the question, “What is life?” which was based on Erwin Schrödinger’s book of the same title.  Camber’s research was of the foundations — the hypostases — that define life, i.e. learning, memory, and space-timeMore…  and more