"remember that a myth is a metaphor for something unknown at the conscious level.
there is an essential unity in both inanimate and animate nature.
One of the most interesting examples of this recursive meta-pattern at the very small living scale is the evolution of bacteria into mitochondria, the engines in our cells that produce energy.
This is an example of emergence in complex systems."
Richard Ott, Dinergy: the Primordial Meta Pattern in Nature.
" the computer has shown us is that complexity can emerge spontaneously from simple beginnings and simple recurring rules called algorithms.
Stephan Wolfram has a theory called computational equivalence:
the universe has evolved according to simple rules that recur over and over again, as if there were an order in the universe,
building up three-dimensional complexity in the way that a longrunning computer program with the right rule models two-dimensional complexity on computer paper."
"One of the most fascinating discoveries about the brain is that our two hemispheres normally function as complementary opposites through the corpus callosum.
However, if the corpus callosum is divided, that third connecting principle is lost and the hemispheres can actually demonstrate competing interests."
"Falling in love is evidence at a very deep personal level of this recurring pattern of dinergy within us and in all of nature.
Dinergy has evolved with infinite changes in the particulars but not in the general recursive meta-pattern.
Perhaps the universe is evolving towards the conscious reconciliation of logos and eros, anima and animus, through individuation,
as a return to the wholeness of nonduality.
the reconciliation of all opposites is still the best definition of the Self."