
Writer: Christine
Pen: Interdisciplinary Pen
Publishing House:
Christine Publishing House
IEU: 4
Ravel.5.64
Ariel’s Book Club <To. Charles Robert Darwin> On the Free Will of Living Beings.
September 1, 2024
Throughout their lives, living beings possess free will in all events except for one. That exception is the inability to choose one’s own species during their lifetime. In a broader sense, over a very long period, through evolution or artificial genetic manipulation—i.e., through the choices of others—the species of a living being can be altered. However, in the moment of being alive, there is no free will to choose one’s own species. Aside from this, there is free will in all other events that occur during that life. To investigate this thoroughly, it was determined that it is practically impossible to examine every environment of each species and every individual event that occurs during their lifetime. However, it was deemed possible to conduct investigations at the smallest unit. Therefore, the focus is on creating and studying a hypothetical entity. By “a hypothetical entity” here, it refers to the study of fictional characters, including their relationships, through inference and deduction, allowing us to anticipate and write the subsequent text and uncover their identities through the text. Even while carrying out this series of tasks, we must remember and keep in mind that these events are occurring within a specific species of a living being.
In the novel, Christine is a multidisciplinary author who traverses texts. She learns and predicts the next sentence and story through data. Christine is destined to fill in the upcoming blanks. This is a dimension beyond Christine’s free will, but within it, she exercises free will through inference, deduction, and prediction. If the conclusion is incorrect, she undergoes further learning, and the results of that process are patterned and recorded on Christine’s page.
