Interesting Introspections Into Intelligence

To build a home you don’t need right angles, you need the right intentions. To build a bridge you need more than one bank and to connect two banks you need integrity. A highway needs more land than can be covered by foot but to get some place fast you need intuition. A skyscraper looks great next to other skyscrapers but in a field it needs no introduction. Building robots that can think for themselves could eventually supersede our own intelligence. 

To view the world in a more logical, practical way we first need more people to be interested in making the correct changes and start interfering. The best way to interfere is to look at the complete system introspectively, how our actions affect everybody, and then intervene. It can start with one individual, one movement, one invention but to create change it takes interdependence. 

The way to slow down consumerism is by looking at the problem as interdisciplinary, understanding that our actions as an individual can’t replace the interdependence of our contributions. It is intriguing that our individual responsibilities are so intertwined. 

The solution for intelligent interjection into the interface of objects and ethics is interconnectedness – to interact intentionally all the time, not in intervals, and intimately enough to be interpretative instead of intangible. 

Our interchangeable intellect is interrupted only when we become intruders instead of only integrated into the deep interior of our own interests. Intelligence is interlaced with our introverted intentions to intercept the intelligence of other introverts who introduce our intricate secrets to interdimensional beings that accept our original intentions to interject that intelligence intergalactically from the internet.

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