DARK ENERGY | LANGUAGE (PART-2)
DARK ENERGY
(LANGUAGE)
- Written by: Internet Warrior (IW)
We, as an energy, have grasped the power of darkness, and through it, we continue to share with you the various events we have witnessed in our journey. As a continuation, here’s a brief prelude about energy itself.
Energy
Sound and light are simply different forms of energy. This energy cannot be created or destroyed by anyone. This is exactly what your physical laws of thermodynamics state. When this energy is concentrated in one place, it causes objects to attract each other—this is what you call gravitational force. Whether it's the subatomic particles within an atom or the many planets in the universe, this gravitational force is common to all matter in the cosmos.
When one object attracts another, various elements are formed. All material substances in the universe are composed of these fundamental elements. Hence, energy initially appears as waves of sound and light, and later takes on material forms like elements and objects. But all of these are simply different manifestations of the same energy.
The First Language
What is language? It’s the exchange of information between two different forms of energy.
So, what was the first language of the cosmos?
It must be gravitational force itself.
Do you know what happened because of that first language? Basic elements started merging together and formed new chemical compounds. All the objects humans see (including yourselves) were formed this way. The only reason your bodies remain as a single unit (independent system) is because the countless atoms in you are bound together by gravitational force.
This same gravitational force is the reason, why all living beings and objects on Earth stay on its surface without floating away.
The Mystery of Gravity
The fascinating thing about gravity is that it doesn't unite all energy into one single form. Instead, it creates different groups or entities.
For example, this gravitational force can combine atoms to create a tree. The same atoms can also form humans. It can form massive, burning spheres like the Sun, or small, green planets like Earth. This way, countless entities have been formed and spread throughout the universe.
Once that happened, having just gravitational force as a medium for communication wasn’t enough. Once atoms could “talk” to each other, the objects and living beings made of those atoms needed their own way to communicate too.
That marks the second stage in the evolution of language.
Chemical Language
As mentioned earlier, atoms combine to form chemical compounds. Through these compounds, many objects and living beings came into existence. To communicate, they began using chemical signals.
For instance:
- A unicellular amoeba interacts with its environment using chemical sensors(which it Secrete called cilia on its surface.
- In a pumpkin field, when one fruit ripens, nearby pumpkins ripen faster. This happens because the ripened one releases chemical compounds into the air, signaling the others that it’s time to ripen.
- Before and after fire, smoke acts as a signal to indicate its presence.
- An ant secretes a chemical called a pheromone to guide other ants to find food. Others smell the scent and follow the same path. This is what you later named formic acid (from Latin "formica" = ant).
- A snake uses venom, a chemical compound, to send a message to protect itself from other creatures.
Thus, over time, many organisms and objects have used chemical language to communicate. A larger compound may create a smaller one to express a message.
The Evolution of Language
This form of chemical communication slowly evolved over time into what humans today call spoken languages.
Would you believe if we told you the reason English, now a global language, came to be so widely spoken was because of a fish?
Yes — in the next part, we’ll explain the evolutionary steps that led to this transformation and how language as you know it came to be.
To be continued…
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