Chapter Thirteen: The Code Breaks

There was an eerie silence in the empty room where both of them agreed to meet, with nothing else on them but their own fears slowly being materialized as the events unfold in succession. The two Physics Taxanomists are quite aware of the crimes being committed, and both of them knew what these things will lead up to a matter of consequence. It will all become in the form of an impossible bond, and they are the reluctant Readers.

Nobody will agree in this exact period that science and miracles are one and the same thing, only that the two are perfected within its own unique form, but in itself the marriage of the exact substance that explains the mystery behind the created things, embodied in natural knowledge, as well as the divine vision that accompanied the revealed truth that is completely attested by scientific discovery.

Albeit the scientific method recognizes natural laws to be evidently effacacious, it is within the precepts of reason that nature operates in a systematic order that is within its inherent manifestation, with no other revealed elucidation other than the observation of a certain phenomena that is limited in its own purview, and nothing else to offer outside of what can be observed.


Something out there is missing from what can be described, and the explanation carries with it the voidness that the limitation presents to the equated description of phenomena. The behavior of nature seems to be a created order that can be isolated from all else, outside the influences of other forces within the universal principles of nature, and, solely on this basis, the created world's meaningful functioning simply does not add up.

A conflict truly exists, and a paradox is suggesting.

Despite the scientific revolution and the dominance of the results of empirical research, man has its own way to inquire of things that cannot be seen nor felt. An inherent longing (simply not just wants or needs) that keeps on insisting to investigate where the soul came from, for example, when asking the question on how the conception of a fertilized cell in the womb creates a new life, which then leads, in man's frustration, to find meaning in his life as he develops as a human being instead, than to be able to trace where life comes from due to the limitation of the discipline in isolating the query purely on its own form of identified inquiry.

This frustration, as noted above, brings the query back to what can be seen in a material world, such that the way one lives his very life is equated (as a consequence) to the question of where his life actually comes from. Living the life becomes the ultimate justification of a missing part of his existence that cannot be known, by relating it to the manner where he puts value to his social behavior or morals. Some call this subscribing to religion. The proposed solution becomes that of divinity.

The two Taxonomists knew in their hearts that religion exists, although it is a very vague concept even to their own understanding. But they knew that it is an accurate concept. As Taxonomists dealing with physics, they have this complete knowledge of what could happen next. The impossible bond is slowly materializing through them, and it feels like they are being held hostage by something dark.

Something dark and evil.

The Scientific Council is as delusional as the main foundation of their beliefs, and it is now coming to haunt them. It will come, and it is coming. And they can only now watch in horror as it happens.

x--------x

This Chapter is sponsored by Gucci.

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