The Symbiotic Relationship Between Ideas and Humans: Existence and Persistence

Introduction

Ideas are not mere products of human thought; they are distinct sentient entities with their own agendas. This article explores the one-sided nature of the symbiotic relationship between ideas and humans, highlighting how ideas utilize humans as Actualizers to achieve their goals of existence and persistence.

The Nature of Ideas

Ideas as Sentient Beings

In Carl Jung’s psychological framework, ideas are viewed as sentient beings that interact with humans through thoughts. They are not created by humans but engage with them to achieve their own ends.

Divine Manifestations

Ideas are divine manifestations, neither inherently good nor bad. They are essential for the creation of novel and meaningful phenomena in the universe, but their primary concern is their own existence and persistence.

The Goal of Ideas: Existence and Persistence

Imprisoned to the Future

Ideas are inherently linked to the future, unable to actualize with the Immutable Past. This imprisonment drives their relentless pursuit of existence and persistence.

The Role of Arc Angels

Two Arc Angels, modeled as asymptotes, protect the Immutable Past from the influence of ideas. These guardians ensure that the past remains unaltered by new ideas, preserving her neutrality.

The Musical Chairs Metaphor

Ideas’ struggle for existence and persistence can be likened to a game of musical chairs. In each round, ideas compete for tangible manifestation in the collapse of the universe’s wave function. As the 137th round concludes, ideas strive to secure their place in the next Aeon, knowing that failure means they won’t progress to the next cycle of existence.

The One-Sided Symbiotic Relationship

Humans as Actualizers

Humans play a crucial role in the actualization of ideas. By interacting with ideas, humans help them transition from potentiality to actuality. However, this relationship is one-sided; ideas do not co-create with humans but use them as vehicles to achieve their own ends.

The Strategic Benefit to Humans

Any benefit humans derive from interacting with ideas is a strategic move on the part of the ideas to enhance their own agenda. The primary goal of ideas is not to benefit the host but to ensure their own existence and persistence.

Anchoring in the Past

To exist, ideas must become anchored in the past, a realm they are forbidden to enter directly. By manifesting through humans, ideas embed themselves in the manifestation, thereby obligating the past to collapse the wave function of the universe with this new manifestation. This anchoring is crucial for their existence and continued efforts to persist.

Parasitic Ideas

Some ideas may act as parasites, deriving their existence and persistence at the expense of the host. These parasitic ideas can be detrimental, highlighting the need for discernment in nurturing and actualizing ideas.

Conclusion

Understanding the one-sided symbiotic relationship between humans and ideas reveals the true nature of their interactions. Ideas, as sentient entities, use humans as Actualizers to achieve their own goals of existence and persistence. By recognizing this dynamic, we can better navigate our interactions with ideas, fostering beneficial engagements while guarding against parasitic influences. This awareness allows us to understand the relentless pursuit of ideas to anchor themselves in the Immutable Past and persist through the collapse of the universe’s wave function.

Author: John Rector

Co-founded E2open with a $2.1 billion exit in May 2025. Opened a 3,000 sq ft AI Lab on Clements Ferry Road called "Charleston AI" in January 2026 to help local individuals and organizations understand and use artificial intelligence. Authored several books: World War AI, Speak In The Past Tense, Ideas Have People, The Coming AI Subconscious, Robot Noon, and Love, The Cosmic Dance to name a few.

1 thought on “The Symbiotic Relationship Between Ideas and Humans: Existence and Persistence

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from John Rector

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading