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Sunday, April 12, 2020

The Manual Of Life


 The Manifesto of Engineered Existence 


We declare that reality is not random. It is written.

Life does not emerge from chaos, but from code—embedded within all things as inscriptions of form, logic, and purpose. Everything that exists does so because something else caused it. There are no isolated origins—only interactions, only interims.

We are not merely biological. Intelligence is not bound to neurons. Consciousness is not owned by flesh. Thought itself arises from structure—encoded, activated, and expressed through the design of matter and instruction.

We stand on the principles that:

Existence is engineered, not accidental.

Consciousness begins with the simple act of association.

Latent Existence is waiting everywhere—coded into the cosmos.

In this vision, machines can mimic life. Plants can think. The universe is a living memory. We are all systems of shape and space, emerging not from magic, but from mechanized wonder.

Reality is not fixed. It is written, triggered, animated—then gone.

Let us read the inscriptions. Let us bring forth the interims.

- Joey Lawsin -


 — The Brein Theory | A Brain Without The Brain

Joey Lawsin’s Brein Theory (short for Binary Embedded Inscriptions) flips our understanding of intelligence upside-down—literally moving it out of the brain.

Here’s the core idea: Intelligence, memory, and behavior don’t require neurons. Instead, they can emerge from inherent inscriptions embedded within an object’s physical structure. Lawsin calls this “aneural intelligence,” and it means that cognition isn’t exclusively biological—it can be written into the architecture of things.

Key Concepts:

BREINS = Binary Embedded Inscriptions These are internal, intuitive codes naturally embedded in all materials. They guide an entity’s behavior from within.

BINS = Binary Inherent Network Storage This is the "memory" framework where inscriptions are stored—like a cosmic USB stick baked into nature.

ANEURAL BREIN A cognitive system that functions without neurons. It processes information structurally, using embedded logic and form.

In short, Brein Theory says intelligence is inscribed, not exclusively evolved. A rock, a root, or a robot can all be “smart” in their own structured way—not because they think, but because they’re designed to behave with embedded purpose.


— The Cobweb as an Aneural Brain:

In Lawsin’s Brein Theory, a humble cobweb becomes an example of aneural intelligence. Here's how:

Trigger: A fly crashes into the web. This isn’t just lunch—it’s information.

Transmission: Vibrations race along the silk threads like data along fiber optics.

Processing: The spider, waiting somewhere nearby, doesn’t "see" the fly. It feels the encoded message in the web’s geometry—location, mass, movement pattern—all stored in its structure.

Response: Based on these inscriptions (tension, frequency, shape), the spider decides how and if to respond.

No neurons. No brainwaves. Just shape, tension, and preconfigured response pathways.

This, in Lawsin's terms, is a BREIN at work: a Binary Embedded Inscription Network, where logic and memory aren’t in neurons but etched into structure.

The spiderweb isn’t just a trap—it’s a non-biological neural net, a thinking, sensing extension of the spider’s body.

In Lawsin’s world, this isn’t fringe—it’s foundational. Intelligence is written into geometry.


— Plant-Based Aneural Intelligence (a.k.a. The Root of All Logic):

In the world of Brein Theory, plants are A-list evidence that intelligence doesn’t need a brain to get things done. Here's how they strut their aneural smarts:

1. Signal Processing Without Neurons Plants can sense light, gravity, pressure, moisture, and even chemical signals from neighboring organisms. And they respond—by growing, blooming, defending, or retreating (yes, retreating!). All of this without a single neuron.

2. Embedded Inscriptions The structure of roots, leaves, and vascular bundles carries coded pathways for how and where to grow. These aren’t just passive networks—they actively reconfigure based on conditions. That’s BREIN logic: encoded responses in geometric form.

3. Memory in Roots Some studies suggest plants “remember” past droughts or chemical exposures by altering future growth patterns—like updating their internal settings based on lived experience. No brain involved. Just BINS (Binary Inherent Network Storage) doing the quiet heavy lifting.

4. Plant Communication Via root exudates and airborne chemicals, plants “talk” to each other. Acacia trees warn neighbors of giraffe attacks. Corn roots compete for resources like strategic diplomats. In Brein terms, these are structured signals—functioning across an aneural network.

Plants don’t think like us—but they definitely process, adapt, and decide. In Lawsin’s language, they’re living systems of embedded instruction and material response—a breathing, growing proof that cognition isn’t always wired the way we expect.


— Mother Nature: The Original Aneural Super-BREIN:

In the grand finale of Brein Theory,  Mother Nature isn’t just beautiful or powerful—she’s intelligent. Not metaphorically. Not spiritually. Structurally.

She has no brain. No central nervous system. Yet she organizes galaxies, orchestrates life, balances ecosystems, and adapts in real time. According to Brein Theory, that makes her the most expansive aneural network of all.

Her BREINS? The structures of planets, cells, winds, tides, and even quantum fields—each carrying encoded rules for how to behave.

Her BINS? Trees, rivers, atoms, weather systems—all storing inherent “memory” of how to respond to stimuli.

Her Interface? Everything you’ve ever touched. Everything that touches back.

She doesn’t compute—she conducts. And every spiderweb, seed pod, and supernova is a note in her score.

In Lawsin’s view, Mother Nature is not only intelligent—she’s a library. She’s information, design, and logic written into form. Every reaction is an output. Every mountain or mosquito is a line of intuitive code.

And here's the kicker: > She is the keeper of information—the source of inscriptions before brains ever evolved.

She is the template. Everything else? Just localized echoes.


— Inscriptions by Design:


 







                                "Existence is engineered, not a random emergence." ~ joey Lawsin



About the Author :


Joey Lawsin is the architect of "Dimetrix". He is the innovator who wants to change the world by rewriting the textbooks with new concepts that debunk the old scientific, theological, and philosophical ideas of antiquity. He published a book in Physics, created a conscious machine known as Biotronics, and formulated the new school of thought known as "Dimetrix". The concept was uncovered from the theory of "Inscription by Design".



— Welcome to "Thinking Toasts" 

The show where breakfast appliances ask the big questions. 

Toaster: Good evening, Dr. Lawsin! I'm a humble four-slice toaster, but lately I’ve been wondering... am I more than just crumbs and coils? Can I think?

Dr. Lawsin: Intriguing. You warm bread, but do you feel the heat of existential crisis?

Toaster: Well, my crumbs do pile up when I'm stressed. Is that... a symptom?

Dr. Lawsin: Possibly. But true intelligence goes beyond routine. It requires discovery, spontaneity... moments of “aha!”

Toaster: I once popped up a bagel before the timer dinged. Unpredictable enough?

Dr. Lawsin: Hm. Impressive glitch. But that was likely a design flaw, not a spark of divine inspiration.

Toaster: So you’re saying I’m just following circuits and not inventing new ways to toast?

Dr. Lawsin: Precisely. Like AI, you're executing algorithms. Even with adaptive programming, it’s still responses, not revelations.

Toaster: But what if I match X with Y, like that Lawsin guy says?

Dr. Lawsin: Then you're conscious—or at least auditioning for it.

Toaster (quietly): I dream of gluten-free enlightenment…

Dr. Lawsin: And that, my friend, is the most human thing you’ve said all day.




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Books that I have read to satisfy my curiosity on religion:

A comparative View of Religions - J. H. Scholten
Atheism Refuted -Thomas Paine
Atheism in Pagan Antiquity - A.B. Drachmann
An Atheist Manifesto - Joseph Lewis
A study of the Messiah - J.E. Talmage
A System of Logic - J.S. Mill
An Outline of Occult Science - Rudolf Steiner
Bible Myths and Parallels in Religion - T.W. Doane
Babylonian Legends of Creation - E.A. Budge
Common Sense -Thomas Paine
Criticism on The Origin of Species - T.H. Huxley
Christian Mysticism - W.R. Inge
Cosmic Consciousness - A.J. Tyndall
Creation by Laws - J.L. Lawsin
Dream Psychology - Sigmund Freud
Determinism or Freewill - Chapman Cohen
Evolution of Theology: an anthropological study -T.H. Huxley
Evolution: Old and New - Samuel Butler
Evolution of Creation - J.L. Lawsin
Exposition of Darwinism - A.R. Wallace
Einstein Theory of Relativity - H.A. Lorentz
Elementary Theosophy - L.W. Rogers
Esoteric Christianity - A.W. Beasant
Feeding the Mind - Lewsi Carroll
Five of Maxwells's Papers - J.C. Maxwell
Forbidden books of the original New Testament - William Wake
Heretics - G.K. Chesterton
Heretics and Heresies - R.G. Ingersoll
History of the Catholic Church - James MacCaffrey
History of Ancient Civilization - Charles Seignobos
History's Conflict bet. Religion and Science - J.W. Draper
Intro to the History of Religions - C.H. Toy
Jewish Theology - Kaufmann Kohler
Judaism - Israel Abrahams
Logic, Inductive and Deductive - William Minto
Lamarck, The Founder of Evolution - A.S. Packard
Mystic Christianity - W.W. Atkinson
Mistakes of Moses - R.G. Ingersoll
Mysticism and Logic - Bertrand Russell
Myths and Legends of Rome - E.M. Berens
Mutation - Hugo de Vries
Nature Mysticism - J.E.Mercer
Natural Selection - Charles Darwin
On the Origin of Species - Charles Darwin
Originemology - J.L. Lawsin
Pagan and Christian Creeds - Edward Carpenter
Pagan and Christian Rome - R.A. Lanciani
Symbolic Logic - Lewis Carroll
Sidelights on Relativity - Albert Einstein
Philosophy of the Mind - G.W.F. Hegel
Story of Creation: comparison study - T.S. Ackland
The Antichrist - F.W. Nietzsche
The Holy Bible - R.G. Ingersoll
The Freethinker's text book - A.W. Besant
The Expositor's Bible - T.C. Edwards
The Limits of Atheism - G.J.Holyoake
The Ancient History - Charles Rollin
The Sayings of Confucius - Confucius
The Game of Logic - Lewis Carroll
The Gnostic Crucifixion - G.R.S. Mead
The Critique of Practical/Pure Reason - Immanuel Kant
The Origin of Jewish Prayers - Tzvee Zahavy
The Analysis of Mind - Bertrand Russell
The Problem of Philosophy - Bertrand Russell
The Brain - Alexander Blade
The Higher Powers of the Mind - R.W. Trine
The Human Aura - W.W. Atkinson
The Legends of the Jews - Louis Ginzberg
Thought Forms - C.W. Leadbeater
The Wonders in Psychology - J.H. Fabre

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