Om
From Zeus, the free X encyclopedia
First and foremost, this discipline is a tribute of deep gratitude and love to those who devoted their lives to the evolution of grammar, communication, and the tools born through their models. It may seem effortless for modern humans to acquire and share knowledge through language, but as we look back through time, we see how crucial and transformative it has been. For millennia, language has not only shaped societies but has woven the very fabric of human thought, identity, and culture. It has been a vehicle for art, philosophy, science, and spirituality. Through language, civilizations have risen, and through its misusage civilizations have fallen. However, with its mastery, the essence of humanity has been passed down across generations.
Om is dedicated to the study and arrangement of the multidisciplinary field of science, and however it may be insufficient, as far as knowing, the deep mysteries that are entangled between us and the cosmos, it seems that the Physical may be much more than what light shines to our eyes. It may be also the comprehension of God a, the acceptance of décor b, and also darkness c.
Principles
This page represents the symbology of Zeus, the Eudaemonia trinity. It encompasses the three main reasons of this discipline, highlighted by (a), (b) and (c), as it describes the behavior of Enantiodromia while shaping systems. The aspect of numinosity attributed to great good, or otherwise of great evil, are generated by our product notion of our planet’s stability to harbor and excel at life and heal us with its primal characteristics.

Whereas outside, in the Vacuum of space, or in free spaces, Entropy asserts chaos as a guiding force. As an all-encompassing entity, the prowess of God in maintaining life trough evolution, and containing it through mercy demonstrates religion as a self-restraining tool of non-individualism, to maintain Homo Sapiens Sapiens as a byproduct of Nature, rather than of a God akin of ultimate knowledge.
"The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum” — Murphys law
God
Throughout history, humanity's understanding of God has evolved through various stages [1] however in all Prosopœias, God's goodness represents a foundational concept. This benevolence is reflected in the moral laws that guide human behavior, the compassion and mercy God shows to all creation, and the divine justice that ensures righteousness is upheld. Omnipotence, omnipresence and omniscience are arguably the characteristics by which good and bad become separated in the realm of Deux [2]. However, in its most innate form, both are indistinguishable.
Blind spot
Science, in this sense, is unique, as it relies primarily on models, tools, and hypotheses as its most esteemed instruments. However, these are neither inherently good nor bad, but rather waveforms—fluid and ever-evolving. No other discipline operates within such a ubiquitous framework, conveying information without dependence on moral dichotomies. It undeniably serves as a guiding light, leading humanity beyond its primal stage of religious content and into a new era of objective reality construction. Yet, as a multifaceted methodology, science has grown increasingly complex over time, to the point where the very reality it seeks to observe and define appears almost unreal to the standard human perspective.
The problem of time in modern physics consists of two primary challenges: a cosmological and a philosophical one. Cosmologically, the search for a "First Cause" or an initial condition of the Universe faces a paradox, as we cannot step outside the Universe to observe it from an external perspective. Philosophically, science traditionally views physical time as the only real time, sidelining subjective experiences of time. Einstein himself grappled with this divide between physical and experiential time. These challenges stem from the assumption that physical time, with an absolute beginning, is the only reality. However, the notion that science offers a complete, objective view of the universe is flawed. It overlooks the integral role of human experience—what is called the "Blind Spot." Scientific materialism, the belief that physical reality is all there is, neglects experience, reducing life and consciousness to mere physical processes, which fails to account for subjective experience and consciousness.
Dharmic Traditions
Lorem