The One
Who Thinks

The kaleidoscope research project has been moving ahead nicely. I
have made quite a number of them and each new improved model is even more stunning. Most
toy kaleidoscopes have poor quality mirrors. Mine have excellent front surface mirrors.
What a difference that makes.
I don't know what it is, but the instant I peered down a
kaleidoscope with good mirrors I was awestruck. They are very special instruments. They
create fascination. Everyone who really looks into one feels it. Nobody knows why we feel
like that about the imagery and surprise and beauty in there, but we do.
When I put my first high-quality kaleidoscope to my eye, I realized
they were a vital thread in Moirae's web. Well, actually, I knew from the first - from the
excitement and drive to do this project - something was leading me, again. Whales or
Moirae or whatever my data-display wants to call it. The message was, "make
kaleidoscopes," so I make kaleidoscopes. Nothing odd about a Ph.D. marine biologist
making kaleidoscopes, is there?
Strewn out before me on Moira's dinette, are brass and copper tubes
of different sizes, mirrors, bits of brilliantly colored broken glass, tiny sea shells,
gem stones, glue, files, tape, polishing equipment, plastic and glass disks. A laboratory
for the investigation of kaleidoscopy. Hot damn!
I pick up my latest effort. It is 215-mm long, 25-mm in diameter,
made of polished copper. It has windows in the side of the tube to let the light in from
the side. The end of the tube has a black surface to backdrop the objects in the action
chamber. Light refracts through the objects in the end chamber and then reflects down the
triangle of long mirrors lining the tube. The end effect is an interwoven tapestry of
color and shapes which is a new environment - a unity made from the many little pieces.
I peer through it, rotate it slowly. Ahhhhh, yesssss. Terrific. OK,
Moirae, let the lessons begin.
Changing, shifting, patterns of reality, bits of broken glass
mirror-echoed in precision array. Never twice the same. Always destined to become the next
image. Fate dictates, physics insists, the turn the clink and the pattern is there.
Admire it, love it, each new pattern is a new reality, each new
pattern is predestination in action.
The pattern, the view, the instants come and go, never the same,
always changing, shifting....just like life. So beautiful I want to say "stop, don't
change" but it does change. Just like life. After awhile I stop saying "stop,
don't change" because I learn when it changes again - as it always does - it is still
more beautiful, for the new image is new and fresh and different.
I learn fascination is ever changing patterns of beauty - newness.
The kaleidoscope is an educational device, teaching about levels of
reality, beauty, symmetry and pattern and about the rules of the three sisters of fate -
the necessity, the beauty, the fascination of change.
The Moirascope carries me to a Magic Sea on a rising tide of
childlike wonder, blazing with joy each time I turn the tube and discover a new miracle of
sight. My conscious mind wavers and vanishes and I am a child. A child in a thrilling
universe aglitter with the fascination of the new and beautiful. Deep memories burst in my
heart, Christmas trees, ice gleaming from branches on that first clear cold winter's day,
the first look at day-glow colors. Luminescent colors of glowing stars on my bedroom
ceiling when I was only a very small boy.
It is a practical demonstration of synergetics - who would ever
suspect those little bits of glass and shell, when put together with a hall of mirrors and
viewed from a certain angle, would behave like that? Buckminster Fuller's ramblings about
"The behavior of the whole is unpredictable and greater than the behavior of its
parts" is transformed by the Moirascope into a vast maze of meanings, layers of
understandings.
The instrument teaches me about flow and change. I look in and see
life looking back. What is it in there?
I see each new pattern created and think about the odds of seeing it
again. Since each little bit of glass or shell can turn on any axis and fall in any way,
the odds of seeing the same scene again are astronomical, a billion to one chance. But
what, then, were the odds of my seeing it in the first place?
Right, a billion to one. Lucky me.
There is something vital in the formation of so many crystalline
patterns from the same, limited number of elements. Like....like the endless patterns of
life which form and change in the Sea, created by the limited number of atomic elements.
"HA! Yes! YES!" I shout, peering into the kaleidoscope.
"Yes what?" Freddy's voice comes from some other world.
"The same bits and pieces, the same carbon, nitrogen, oxygen,
phosphorous and other elements. The very same atoms which have existed since the planet
formed billions of years ago. No, the very same atoms forged in the heart of a star even
before the planet formed." I put down the kaleidoscope, blinking rapidly to enter her
world and look at her.
"Huh? What about atoms?" She looks confused.
"They are in here, in this kaleidoscope. In you and me. They
are the same atoms created billions of year ago in a star. The same exact ones." I
shout excitedly.
"Uh, sure. I guess so." She's looking at me strangely.
"These bits and pieces of stellar creation are still here
today, right now, but they have changed their position, formed new shapes and
relationships. The same atoms! But always changing patterns and relationships. An ever
changing kaleidoscope of life on Earth." It is an obvious fact but there is something
new and exciting about it. The atoms constructing my body, the kaleidoscope, the air, the
sea, the Moira are ancient, unchanged, original issue, made in the heart of a star 4.5
billion years ago.
Freddy smiles, her shoulders start to shake. Then she bursts out
laughing.
"What's so funny?" I demand, peeved she is not sharing in
this momentous discovery.
"You. You should see yourself. The perfect image of the wild,
crazy scientist." She begins to really hoot and guffaw. "Your hair is standing
straight up, ohhhhh ha ha ha ha ha."
Insulting as this is, I can't help snicker along until she calms
down. "Ok, Ok. But you're witnessing an important scientific breakthrough."
This sets her off again so I leave it alone and go back to my
research. Within seconds after I peer into the Moirascope again, it's wonder recapture my
mind. I feel hot. Not figuratively, but really. Or maybe both figuratively and really. I
see life flowing in a way I have never seen before. I see atoms flowing through organic
molecules, molecules forming and reforming in cells, cells as little animals being born,
living and dying in a matter of weeks or months and I can see how their birth, behavior,
and death create the form and shape of a human, and I see humans come and go, flowing by
from birth to death in a stream of beings which form an ever growing encrustation of
civilization upon the planet.
There is another layer of meaning I find almost impossible to grasp.
I keep thinking the word mana. Turn the tube, clink the pattern changes, Mana. Turn the
tube, clink, Mana. Clink, Mana. Clink, Mana. Mana.
I hand the kaleidoscope to Freddy, "Here, have a look in here,
smartass" I get the dictionary out of the bookshelf. Freddy, eye fixed to the copper
tube, moans, "Ohhhhh, this is a really beautiful one." No longer the doubter,
now. Her mind transfixed by the reality of kaleidoscopy.
The dictionary says, "Mana. N. (Native
Polynesian term), the impersonal supernatural force to which certain primitive peoples
attribute good fortune, magical powers, etc."
Why should I think of Mana? My eye wanders up the page of my
Webster's dictionary and finds;
"Man. N. (ME.; AS, Mann; akin to G. Mann.
Goth. Manna." Manna? "basic sense 'the one that
thinks'." I didn't know that. The one that thinks? Hmmmm. Man? Manna?
Wow! This is it! It's part of the whale message. It's all linked
together. It's one of the threads of the Moirae. Man. Mana. The one that thinks. Yes. Yes.
That's the elusive concept I see in the Kaleidoscope. Here it is:
The symmetry, the pattern, the flow, the newness, the billion to one
odds, synergetics, all happen because of the one that thinks - the eye peering with
childlike wonder down the hall of mirrors. Mana. Synergetics. Man. Mana and Man are not
nouns. They are verbs. That's why kaleidoscopes are important to evolution. Or rather,
that's why evolution was part of the whale's message. To make me understand how the one
who thinks is the thread of awareness in the evolution of life on Earth. Yes!
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