Innate tendencies: Proof for a Supreme being
Innate Tendencies: A Subtle Proof of a Supreme Being
By Raghvendra Khare
Some truths are not proven by intellect, but by instinct. One such truth is the existence of a Supreme Being—subtly confirmed not by formal arguments, but by the innate tendencies embedded in living beings.
The Subconscious and the Universal Link
Decisions arising from the subconscious often outweigh those made consciously. This is because the subconscious seems to remain connected to something far larger—the universe itself, or perhaps its origin.
Some animals, moments after birth, already know what food to seek and what to avoid. Others are born swimmers, without any lessons. Birds build perfect nests without formal training in geometry or civil engineering. Certain mathematical savants can calculate prime number cascades without learning mathematics. Even in daily life, we often swat mosquitoes more effectively when half asleep than when fully awake—perhaps because we’re less encumbered by conscious interference.
What explains these phenomena? Could such embedded intelligence point toward a deeper, guiding principle or being?
Innate Social Order and the Idea of the Supreme
Across the animal kingdom, social structures arise organically. Often, one member occupies a central or revered position. This pattern—seen even in insects, birds, and mammals—hints at hero worship, a primitive drive to center power or reverence around a figure. In higher animals like chimpanzees, this tendency becomes more conscious and focused.
These patterns suggest that the subconscious, shared across life forms, has a pre-installed idea of central authority, possibly a reflection of a Supreme Source. We may not always be able to interpret this impulse with our conscious minds, but it drives us nonetheless.
In humans, this manifests in the universal pull toward deities, leaders, gurus, and ideals. Even atheists tend to elevate reason or science as a kind of higher principle. It seems that the idea of something greater than ourselves is hardwired.
Beyond Intellect and Dimension
We are wired to perceive reality in four dimensions—length, width, height, and time. Yet both quantum physics and mystical traditions suggest that reality is multi-dimensional. The inconsistency between quantum and classical physics, along with anecdotal but persistent reports of phenomena like ghosts, suggests that we are glimpsing only part of a much vaster whole.
If reality is truly multi-dimensional, then our current tools of inquiry—logic, observation, and even science—are limited. Our questions and answers at the absolute level become invalid because we are trying to use flat logic to navigate a folded universe.
Hence, there is a limit to our intellectual pursuits. We try to interpret the world through our senses and conscious reasoning, but the universe transcends both. The intuitive sense of a Supreme Being arises not from logic, but from something deeper—a resonance between our subconscious and the Source of all being.
------------------------------------------------------------------Raghvendra Khare
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