Wooooo! Let's listen to some of the abstract thoughts that pass through Ripple's head! :D

Chapter 1

Nature the Machine

by: Ripple_
So, occasionally weird, philosophical questions find their way into my brain, and they keep bugging me and driving me crazy, and I can't stop thinking about them until my head explodes.
So, here's the latest question that's been annoying me:

Why is an animal's instinct to survive, to reproduce, and to continue the population?

Think of a butterfly. It spends most of its existence in the form of a caterpillar. As a caterpillar, its purpose it to grow, to eat, and to survive, so that it can become a butterfly. When it becomes a butterfly, it only has a few days left to live. It spends those few days finding a mate, and laying its eggs. When that is done, it dies.

So, the purpose of that butterflies existence has, essentially, been to bring more butterflies into existence. The purpose of those butterflies will also be to create more butterflies. So obviously, their instinct is to continue the population; but why? These butterflies serve no ultimate purpose. They're not trying to make the population grow for any particular reason, they just do.

This is the how it is for almost every species, excluding, perhaps, humans.

Isn't this like...a machine that's sole purpose is to keep itself running?

Doesn't that make all life meaningless?

I'd like to hear your opinion about this, I'm curious to see what other people think. Maybe it'll stop the question from bothering me so much. :)

Well, that's really all I have to say for now. I know this was weird, and short, but oh well. xD
Thank you for reading. :3

~Ripple

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Created by Ripple_

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Ripple_
17, Female
Jamming good with Weird and Gilly, and the Spiders from Mars, AU
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