Tuesday, 28 February 2012

The food chain & God

As per the food chain taught at school we learn that the energy passes on from Sun to plants &thru the chain. Plants are the primary consumer (it consumes energy from sunlight) but for rest its the only producer in the food chain.

Herbivores (animals & insects) live on plants & other creatures live on plants &/or Herbivores.

Lets look at it from another perspective ....We all think/know/believe there is life in the plant.... so where does it come from???

So where does the plant get its food ???
soil ? if you remove the plant from the soil it dies.
sunshine ? but no Sunshine no plants
or is it water ? we have learnt plants need water to survive
or is it air ? they don't grow in vacuum...
The plant needs air, sunshine, water & soil to grow ...and where did these elements come from??? Get it...

The plants gets its life from the "seed + water+air+ soil + air + sunshine = plant"

So where is God in this equation???? Well the elements are the nature created by God, and the unmanifested plant in the seed is the little bit of God inside each plant & seed which is always there and can grow to give more to the world.

But some theories say that the seed had life inside it, the rest of the elements just help it grow...but other says that the energies & life forces of all combine to make it into a plant to bear flowers & fruit & recreate the cycle of life.

Do we see a grain of wheat as just a grain? Or a seed that has the capacity to grow and produce many more grains ( or seeds with the ability to multiply with support from nature !)

Someone is bound to argue that by cooking the grain we destroy its ability to grow ....think of it this way that the cooked grains also have energy & gets passed to the person eating them. So energy does not get destroyed only the form changes.

When plants & animals die they merge back into nature ( the elements)

The food chain makes it evident that energy from the elements transforms and passes through the food chain ( read nature & the world) and then returns to the elements .

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