Chapter Twenty One: Him, the Sovereign Columbusian

It was time to move on. This flesh that he is currently controlling has done its service. After committing a total of eight murders, it is now the perfect timing to switch places.

He was not a creature unleashed from a certain source, but he embodies all the substantive nature of the dangerous rhetoric as it relates to the power and control of the creatures in motion. He does not have a gender as well, but he refuses to be called "it." That cannot be in all circumstances. Everyone must call and address his presence as "he."

The flesh, including the character's complicated organic design (which is very similar to a human's) known to many in the medical field as physiology, was a dirty organic matter, at least according to his own way of definition. Most of the time, there is no difficulty at all in controlling how a human being is to be motivated to do a particular act; mostly, it just involves money, sex, and fame to attract the vulnerability of the flesh, precisely when its behavior has not been shaped by good discipline.


In many ways, all organic matter and biological instincts derive its state from the need for survival, like, in the greater animal kingdom (excluding the "great" species of the homo sapiens), the need to procreate, how to care for their offsprings, and where to get its diet in order to survive. But since humans have since then attained the perfect status of a rational mind, humans (even though portrayed as characters) should be able to suppress the need to act when emotions are simply dictated by cognitive reaction and hormonal changes in the body.

And this important need for disciplining human desires, also known as morality and the regulation of behavior, have been reduced down to mere affairs strictly of religious beliefs, as if the conditions related to the definition is something trivial and unimportant. That while humanity is inquiring about the laws and theories that govern natural science, it tends to forget its own self, at most, by resorting to mere philosophical explanation of the substantive defects that pertain to those invisible nature of such moral values.

Reality has been redefined, evolved, denied, fantasized, and pitifully assumed by a certain status and the dire circumstances of thought, that the mind has continuously entertained dreams in the form of delusions that could define moral habits; some even detest the arguments of himself as worthy and important and that he matters by resorting to physical violence in support of a contemplated act, by rationalizing dangers and perils coming from his own person as necessary for certain ideals, and among others.

But the most important concepts that humans have failed to discover (as of this writing) is the realm after death, and what happens to the soul when the human body is physically dead. No one, no scientist, has ever been able to separate the soul from the domain of physiological functions (by taking the philosophical definition of a human being), but science also recognizes that the air we breathe is present in the atmosphere as much as the soul is ever present, despite being invisible. This is a fact that the concept of the unseen cannot be disproven simply because it cannot be seen.

Him, the Columbusian, the Faithful One, has known from the very beginning of the creation of this universe, that all facets of logical reasoning has been limited by human faculty including the limits realization, and that humanity (and all characters in their stories that they characterize, in their own right) can never see what already transpired in the past, just as time allows the explaination of physical laws in the most perfect methodology following the scientific method.

But information is limited. Some things require persuasion to acknowledge its nature, without necessarily resorting from any exposed fallacy.

And fallacy is the biggest weakness of human articulation. Him, the Columbusian, know this to be a fact that he conveniently exploits in every appearance and mobility that he makes, mind to mind, character to character, and, eventually, into the fundamentals of the humanities.

x--------x

The Chapter is made possible by Nike, Inc.

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