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Cybernetics and the Origin of Life; The Origin of Matter and Black Holes

Authors

Gihan Soliman, The Linnaean Society for Mineral Cybernetics, United Kingdom

Abstract

Since abandoning Linnaeus' Kingdom Minerals as a living system, the philosophy of science has been fragmented into specialities and knowledge domains that fail to communicate across, effectively. Between the living and the so-called non-living systems, as well as social organisations, the value of Cybernetics as a reconciliatory medium tawards a theory of everything has never been more significant. Each to their own jargon, biases and conflicting perspectives, cross-disciplinary science communication has become almost futile. Sciences claiming to present objective views, such as the famous E=mc^2, present the reality in flat linear formulas, while living systems are five dimensional, three dimensions representing the objectivity of situations, and spacetime which is the 'here and now', then the position of the observer, representing the perspective of the time in space or the space in time of the observation; without the position of the observer, even the third dimension cannot be realised, let alone the dimension of spacetime. This paper postulates the origin of life and matter from a Cybernetic perspective, uniting the laws of physics, and the Big bang theory with the String Theory. E=mc^2 as popularly presented, fails to refer to the role of information in the inter-reversibility of energy and matter. Information according to the theory of information is a message, a sender and a receiver and therefore requires an observer. Overlooking the role of the observer, therefore, is overlooking the role of information in system processes, presenting only a flat snapshot of reality. This paper explores the origin of life, conservation of matter, dark matter, and the fabric of spacetime while postulating a theory of everything from a Cybernetic perspective.

Keywords

Cybernetics, reconciliation, origin of life, theory of everything, holistic, Linnaeus, observer, minerals

Full Text  Volume 14, Number 7