你或許聽過「量子糾纏」或「雙縫干涉實驗」,繼續深入,你會看到物理學家與量子力學家的無數推論。

在超越認知的辯論中,科學家總是習慣透過研究尋找答案。若真相無法驗證,證明科學有其極限,宇宙的奧秘超出人類理解範圍。

我個人不好奇粒子與光子的世界,直覺告訴我,過度鑽研並無必要,人需要適度承認自身的受限。

面對不可思議的現象,人類的本能常以冷嘲回應:「那是騙人的」,媒體也常犯類似的錯,凡是違反主流、難以置信的,就以頭條抨擊,甚至無須查證。

就我而言,比起宇宙的祕密,我更想知道:極端氣候究竟如何形成?又為何在智能爆發的時代,仍有國家透過戰爭掠奪土地?

 

真相必須公開,但有些真相注定超出我們的知覺,它存在於另一個我們無法抵達的維度。

我早年酷愛閱讀「法則」的書籍,深受啟發。其中有一條簡單卻深刻的規則:「你給得越多,得到的越多。」這種「先捨後得」的原理,我們並不陌生,卻少有人視它為宇宙的法則。

相信它的人,往往不需驗證,就能迎來善果。因為自然法則不是人造,而是造物主的遊戲規則,而我們所能做的,就是謙卑順服。

生命的真正運作,學校從未教過。教育體制教我們比較與競爭,於是我們學會了貪,也學會了傲慢。這些態度潛移默化,成為思想的驅動力。

面對甲狀腺失衡的人,我常直言:「你貪快、貪多、貪忙了。」有能力的人不願相信「做得多」竟是一種貪,他們不知超越身體極限的代價,身體會忠實記錄下來。

深知能力與貪婪之間的糾纏,因為我就是過來人。身體本身蘊藏著一把無形的法尺,時時監控我們的心念與行為,這是科學難以觸及的奧祕。

 

多年體驗讓我看見:每個人身上都隱藏著傲慢。尊貴與卑微、優秀與拙劣、富裕與貧困,上司與部屬、台上與台下。這些權力的遊戲,本質上都受傲慢操控。

醫生與癌症患者的對話就是縮影:病人不配合治療,就會被警告;而醫生掌握話語權,傲慢往往顯而易見。

然而,癌症病人的背後,也常能找到傲慢的軌跡:不服氣、不甘心、不公平、不快樂……,這些情緒,正是固執與傲慢的變奏。

真正的智慧,在於和善;真正的高度,在於寬恕。捨棄傲慢,就不再與人結怨;捨棄貪婪,就不再扮演熱鍋上的螞蟻。

疾病的形成有其軌跡,外表溫和的人,內心可能仍懷傲慢;看似良善的人,內裡可能仍藏貪婪。背離法則太遠,最終必受法則裁決,這沒有商量的餘地。

 

身為人類,我們本具卓越與慈悲,卻往往迎向傲慢與貪婪。因為不懂珍惜,缺乏感恩,造物早已看透人性的自私,於是讓我們經歷苦難。

貪與慢,是人類最劣質的兩種動機與態度。我帶著這兩個烙印從家庭走進學校與社會,就像誤闖叢林的小白兔。直到後來,我才領悟:所有錯誤與教訓,都源於這兩者。

兩個人爭吵,不正是因為貪與慢?疾病,不正是貪與慢的產物?

極端氣候,不正是如此?戰爭,不正是如此?地球接近毀滅,不也是貪與慢的結果?

 

(自私與貪婪,不論是個人的還是國家的,都是我們大部分困境的根源。)

 

Greed and Arrogance

You may have heard of quantum entanglement or the double-slit experiment. If you dig deeper, you will encounter countless hypotheses proposed by physicists and quantum theorists.
In debates that surpass human cognition, scientists habitually seek answers through research. Yet when truth cannot be verified, it exposes the limits of science: that the mysteries of the universe lie beyond human comprehension.

Personally, I am not curious about the realm of particles and photons. My intuition tells me that excessive probing is unnecessary; humans must learn to acknowledge their own limits.
When faced with the unexplainable, our instinct often responds with sarcasm: “That’s a scam.” Media, too, frequently falls into this trap—attacking whatever contradicts mainstream views, whatever seems unbelievable—without even bothering to verify.

For me, more pressing than the secrets of the cosmos are questions such as: How does extreme climate actually form? And why, in this era of explosive intelligence, do nations still wage wars to seize land?

Truth must be revealed, yet some truths inevitably exceed our perception. They exist in a dimension we cannot reach.
In my early years, I devoured books about “laws” and was deeply inspired. One simple yet profound rule stayed with me: “The more you give, the more you receive.” This principle of giving before gaining is not unfamiliar, yet few regard it as a universal law.
Those who trust it often reap blessings without demanding proof. For natural law is not man-made, but the Creator’s rule of the game; our role is only to accept it with humility.

The true workings of life were never taught in school. The education system trained us in comparison and competition; thus we learned greed, and we learned arrogance. These attitudes seeped into us, quietly becoming the driving forces of thought.
When facing people with thyroid imbalance, I often say bluntly: “You have been greedy for speed, greedy for more, greedy for busyness.”
The capable resist believing that “doing more” can itself be a form of greed. Yet they fail to see that the price of exceeding bodily limits is faithfully recorded in the body itself.

I know this entanglement between ability and greed, for I have lived it. The body holds within itself an invisible ruler, constantly monitoring our thoughts and actions—a mystery science cannot easily touch.

Years of experience have shown me that arrogance hides in everyone. Noble and humble, talented and inept, wealthy and poor, superior and subordinate, those on stage and those below—all these power games are essentially governed by arrogance.
The dialogue between doctors and cancer patients is but a microcosm: if the patient refuses treatment, they are warned; the doctor holds the authority of speech, and arrogance often becomes visible.
Yet behind cancer patients, one often finds arrogance too: resentment, unwillingness, a sense of injustice, unhappiness—emotions that are merely variations of obstinacy and pride.

True wisdom lies in kindness. True height lies in forgiveness. Abandon arrogance, and you no longer make enemies; abandon greed, and you no longer scurry like an ant on a hot pan.
Illness follows its own trajectory. A person gentle in appearance may still harbor arrogance within; one who seems virtuous may still conceal greed. Stray too far from the law, and eventually, the law itself will render judgment—without negotiation.

As humans, we are born with excellence and compassion, yet we so often choose arrogance and greed. Because we fail to cherish and lack gratitude, the Creator—long aware of human selfishness—allows us to pass through suffering.

Greed and arrogance are the two basest motives and attitudes of mankind. I carried these two imprints from family into school and society, like a naïve rabbit stumbling into the jungle. Only later did I realize: all errors and lessons stemmed from them.

Do not quarrels arise from greed and arrogance?
Is not disease their product?
Is not extreme climate so? Is not war so?
And is not the looming destruction of Earth itself the ultimate outcome of greed and arrogance?