I have this theory I will name "The borderless thesis" (i wish i thought of a better name for this). I don't claim i invented anything and I would appreciate if you would point me in direction of some writers or phylosphers that deal with this issue. I don't even claim i know anything and am a huge skeptic. Basicaly the theory comes in direct correlation with the gaia hypothesis. The teory is that there are no borders between anything exepct in law and in our minds. You can't place a line to separate things. There is no border between black or white, it's a shade called gray. It can be applied to other "more improtant" things such as life. There is no line between alive and not alive, there is a huge shade between and we are definitely not at the top. Thus this is where supreme forms of life come on. Basically the lower life forms can not exist without a higher form to feed of, such as viruses who hibernate if there is no host cell and animals and plants who wouldn't exist without a planet and a sun to consume it's energy. Life is not created by random, it is created by conditions which allow him to survive. Much like that virus can't be vaccinated because if comes from fucking nowhere and comes back fucking different. A rock is certainly not alive but there are many lower life forms such under us and more alive beings above us. It's very simple to this point but then i thought, if there is white and there is black, and if there is no life, than there must be something on the other side of the life scale. Something very different, something the entire universe feed s from... let's call it the great spirit, or god perhaps? Basically like the computer works with 1s and 0s, and we know that solid matter has a lot of empty space between atoms, why wouldn't the world be made from yes and nos, a shade between existance and no existance. Corgito ergo sum? I don't think so. Remember Bill Hicks. I find it comforting, because it doesn't place us under the creationist's palm, it puts us in a pandeistic position where we are the building blocks of (let's call him) god. The universe creates the triangle of existance, like a universal food chain, is there a peak of the triangle, i don't know, but if there is, then that would be what you call god. The great spirit
It sounds to me like much like the Buddhist concept of interdependence. Also Robert Pirsig has his theory of inorganic, inorganic, biological, social, and intellectual values,