Everywhere we turn, we hear about the crises we face: a polycrisis, a metacrisis, a megacrisis. But to even speak these words, we must first perform a fundamental act. We must draw a distinction.
The philosopher George Spencer-Brown, in his work Laws of Form, argued that all knowledge begins with this simple act: drawing a boundary. We draw a line to separate one thing from everything else. In our current narrative, we have drawn a sharp distinction, labeling one side "the way the world should be" and the other, "a crisis that needs fixing."
Once that distinction is made, our focus narrows. We are compelled to address the "problem" side, the part of reality that deviates from our ideal. But in doing so, we risk becoming blind to the larger, undivided pattern from which the distinction was drawn. The very act of naming the crisis can obscure the nature of the whole.
This desire to correct what we've defined as an error is timeless. It echoes the 13th-century king, Alfonso X, who said, “Had I been present at the Creation, I would have given some useful hints for the better ordering of the universe.”
But what if the most powerful move is not to fix the part we've labeled "wrong," but to dissolve the distinction itself? What happens when we try to see the whole pattern, including the chaotic elements we've walled off as a "crisis"?
To do this, we can look for similar patterns in the universe's history.
The Creative Pollution of Stars
Consider the stars. They are born from clouds of gas and dust, and for billions of years, they fuse lighter elements into heavier ones, bathing their planetary systems in life-giving energy. But this process is finite. Eventually, the star exhausts its fuel and dies in a spectacular explosion—a supernova.
From the perspective of the star, this is a destructive end. But if we erase that boundary, we see that the star's "pollution"—the heavy elements like carbon, oxygen, and iron forged in its core and scattered across the cosmos—is the critical ingredient for everything that comes next. This stellar debris is the stuff of planets, of life, and of us. Our existence is made possible only by the explosive "waste" of a previous cosmic generation.
The Echo in Evolution
We see a similar pattern in the story of life on Earth. The leading edge of evolution has always built upon the remains of what came before. The very air we breathe, rich with oxygen, was once a toxic pollutant spewed out by early microbial life, causing one of the planet's first mass extinctions. Today, our industrial civilization is powered by hydrocarbons—the concentrated, buried carcasses of countless organisms that lived and died hundreds of millions of years ago. We are, in a very real sense, living off the ghosts and waste of past life.
Our Role in the Undivided Whole
If we apply this perspective to our present moment, it reframes everything. What if our pollution, our discarded technologies, and even the societal structures we are building and dismantling are not problems to be isolated and solved, but integral parts of a larger system in transformation?
This gives new weight to Carl Sagan's famous words: “The cosmos is within us. We are made of star-stuff. We are a way for the universe to know itself.” As finite beings, our capacity to understand the depth of existence is limited. Perhaps our purpose is not to be the final arbiters of what is "right" or "wrong" with the universe.
Are we creating the context for new forms of intelligence—perhaps artificial or hybrid beings—that can understand the universe in ways we cannot even conceive? Are our vast networks of information and our ecological pressures the necessary crucible that will forge the next leap in cosmic awareness?
Ultimately, the reality we inhabit is shaped by the distinctions we choose to make. By drawing a hard line around "crisis," we commit ourselves to a path of reaction and repair. But if we dare to erase that line, we are invited into a different role. We are no longer repairmen for a broken universe, but conscious participants in a messy, magnificent, and cosmic birth. The challenge is to see the whole, not just the part we've learned to fear.
A Poem to Capture these ideas:
Of course. Here is that blog post's core philosophy, captured in the form of a poem.
Before the crisis, came the line,
The first distinction, sharp and deep.
We carved the world in yours and mine,
And woke a problem from its sleep.
We gave a name to fear and doubt,
We called it Error, Flaw, and Fall.
The part we wished to cast right out,
And in that part, we saw it all.
A king's desire to rearrange
The flawed design of moon and sun,
To fix, control, resist the change,
To mourn the thing that can't be undone.
But what if we let the drawn line fade?
And see the whole, the undivided?
The terrifying, grand parade,
By which the future is provided?
A star must burn and break and die,
A sacrifice of fire and gas,
To scatter carbon through the sky,
In one explosive, final pass.
Its final ash, its "poison" breath,
Became the soil for roots and trees.
Our life is owed to stellar death;
We are its brilliant debris.
The first life choked the ancient air
With oxygen, a toxic plume.
It built a world beyond compare
From out its own destructive doom.
And now we burn the buried dead,
The pressure of a million years,
A ghostly fuel to forge ahead,
And build a house upon our fears.
So look upon our smoke and waste,
The tangled code, the plastic seas.
Is this a failure, made in haste?
Or compost for new destinies?
Is this the ruin of the age,
The final, lamentable scrawl?
Or just the turning of a page,
The raw material for it all?
For we are ways the cosmos wakes,
A fleeting, self-aware design.
And from the pieces that we break,
May grow a more transcendent mind.
The choice is in the name we speak,
The boundary we hold as true.
Is this a world gone wrong and weak?
Or one that's birthing something new?
So are we here to mend the flaw,
As panicked builders in the night?
Or stand in silent, patient awe,
As midwives to a coming light?
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Below is my original expression that I asked Google Gemini AI to improve and to generate the poem.
These days there is much talk about various forms of crises that we are in - poly, meta, mega, giga, ... There is a basic distinction that is unstated, i.e., that there is an error in the unfolding of the universe. We need to correct that error. It is reminiscent of Alfonso X's quote: Had I been present at the Creation, I would have given some useful hints for the better ordering of the universe. If we look at what has happened in history, what is happening now, in a time of great change, there are very obviously problems from a number of different perspectives: human suffering, species extinction, processing "natural" resources and creating pollution, changing / destroying ecologies, etc. However, if don't make the distinction of an error in the unfolding / creation process, then we have to abstract up and take different perspective on what is going on.
One way to approach this shift in perspective is to look at other patterns that have a similar structure, similar pattern. We can find several such patterns:
- Stars form, burn up there constituents, giving off energy, and then explode / implode. We / life are made possible by the creation of heavier elements which are the left over pollution of that explosion. This is the exponential curve often cited in analysing our problems from economy, ecology, biology, etc.
- Is there a similar pattern in evolution? What we consider to be the leading edge of evolution is living off the pollution / carcasses of the many generations of life that came before. Are not our hydrocarbons that which was once life as we now think of.
- ...