Tuesday, October 17, 2017

HUMAN ABILITY to REASON, HUMAN RIGHT to CONSENT - Proem & Poem No. 40

Most likely to be published sometime in latter 2017 or early 2018, my 10th book currently entitled; 100 Proems & Poems on the HUMAN ABILITY to REASON, HUMAN RIGHT to CONSENT & Other Neglected Matters. The following will probably be included upon further editing, and front cover below merely a working version....


PROEM & POEM No. 40 - Garden of Eden / Part 3


      Whether the first humans actually hungered and thirst while in the Garden of Eden, or merely desired to eat and drink for pleasure, the dynamics involving the acquisition of food and water were the same then, since, as it is now. Consequently, Adam and Eve’s lack of omnipresence necessitated labor (e), their lack of omniscience and omnipotence exasperated it. Digressively, upon the divine judgment ending the Garden era, labor (e) was compounded further due to Nature cursed and altered from continuously lush, plentiful and full, to occasionally or regularly barren, scarce and dry hence prevalent the risk of lack and harm.

      Post-Eden conditions immediately demanded far more labor (e) and sweat of face (or brow), far more time (t) to fill Adam’s cup and Eve’s basket as well to gather wood and straw to carve and weave the same cup and basket. In brief, the inhabitants of the cursed world were in constant jeopardy, mitigated only by much human labor. With that said, similarities logically remain regardless of belief or doctrine. Comparatively, if someone ate in the Garden, then someone labored however mildly per constantly favorable conditions. Consistently, if someone ate since the Garden, then someone labored however greatly per occasionally or regularly unfavorable conditions. 

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Sin; to pretend and portend, then apprehend to expend
Truly to distend, duly to extend hence verily to transcend
Absolutism to relativism per empiricism to neo-polytheism
Rationalism to eroticism by individualism to pop-pugilism

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Come let us Reason. Peace is always a Choice.




Copyright © 2016-2017 by D.C. Quillan Stone

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