@mangeurdenuage yeah, human analogies for nature are always lacking :)
@mangeurdenuage indeed. many of our problems as men stem from not considering us as parts of nature anymore.
(philosophical rambling follows)
i wonder how many of these phenomenon really are to be explained by science alone. i was pretty spiritual in my teens w.r.t. nature, then took a detour following the lure of technology and materalism in my 20s, only to find that materialism is pretty much bullshit and a very bleak outlook on things. there's no joy and love to be found in it.
present day it's pretty much clear to me that there are other things in this world, even inanimate things do have a spirit in a sense. regrettably this aspect has been pretty much lost in the west - as it was lost for me as well.
@mangeurdenuage
> Science is just observation cause and effects.
Anything can be explained by observation.
maybe, i have the vague feeling that some things don't like to be observed :)
> It's a balance, there's a base need for anything, be it social or environmental (meaning taking into account possession and surroundings) to be.
possessions and creating nice surroundings are fine! i was referring to the materialist mindset, the hubris that men can control himself, the world and other beings by means of science, regarding them as flesh-(or plant-)machines. the whole covid episode was a great example of this.
> Basic sanity has been lost for a while tbh.
Currently the alienation of our specie is so great that a part of the population is behaving in a parasitic manner instead of their natural symbiotic manner that permitted our specie to survive until now.
couldn't have put it better! :)
The cause of not feeding are yet still fully to be known, we just know that if a plant doesn't does it's part a fungi won't necessarily help it either.
What the article also fails to mentions is that seedlings etc... also attracts these fungi in their rizosphere because it's rich in needed fungi nutrients.
So we actually don't know who initiates what, maybe it's both.
What's certain is that they both gain from exchanging with each other.
This is the only analogy that comes close to some animal relations, not banks.