Studying various substances reveals the primal desire of matter and everything is to preserve its own existence. Yet, this attention is expressed differently in each material. Solid objects have a shape that is fixed and defined, which makes it difficult to penetrate their boundaries, while other forms guard themselves by motion and change.
The behaviour of substances is somewhat like a computer screen. We might be impressed with the image on the display, but a computer professional treats the identical picture simply as a mix of colours and pixels. This tech is interested only in the varied parameters that create the image. Computer people see that the computer image is merely the superficial look of a specific combination of those forces.
They understand which components need adjusting manifesting generator to produce a clearer, brighter, and sharper image, and this is what they focus on. In much the same way, everything and system in fact, including Humanity and human culture, reflects its own unique, inherent mix of forces. To deal with any specific problem that arises, an individual must start by understanding matter-behaviour in its various levels. And for this to happen, we have to reach deeper to the inherent force that shapes and designs matter.
The Will to Exist
The inherent force within every matter and item is generally referred to as the will to exist. This force designs the form of the material and defines its own qualities and comportment. There are infinite forms and mixtures of the will to exist, which is at the foundation of all of the substance on the planet. A higher amount of material reflects a higher desire to exist, along with the differing needs in each of the levels of material that still, vegetative, animate, and the talking individual shape the many processes unfolding inside.
The desire to exist follows two principles:
- Maintaining its current shape, meaning continuing to exist; and
- Adding to itself anything it senses is essential for its existence. The urge to add something is what distinguishes between the various degrees of thing.
Humans, unlike the other creatures, need several years to evolve. When a baby is born, it barely wants anything. However, as it grows, its will to get intensifies and evolves tremendously. Every time a new desire surfaces, it generates new demands, which the human being feels pressured to meet. To meet the new demands successfully, the mind evolves, as we start to contemplate ways to fulfil the new desire. It follows that the brain’s intellectual and conceptual evolution is a result of the intensification of our desire to enjoy.