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Coexisting with nature.


"Is kindness necessary to coexist with nature?"

The concepts we normally imagine, such as "kindness" and "compassion," are merely human expressions of the way creatures live in nature.

Nature has been operating its own laws even before the ethics of "kindness" were born.
Humans have also incorporated this law into their genes and have been welcomed into the natural world.

Is this kind of human-centered "kindness" really the key to coexisting with nature?
Rather, isn't it the kind of imagination that we have when we discover "kindness" in nature and try to describe it?

To be inspired by nature and to nurture the imagination.

The richness of imagination, which is innate to humans, is also a richness of nature.


That is what GANON FLORIST considers to be "coexistence with nature."

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Coexisting with nature.

Nature and Humanity

In fact, there is a contradiction in these words, but we humans are generally not uncomfortable with this distinction.

So, what do plants living in nature think about us humans?
Plants use all of their cells to "live," and they probably don't have even a moment to think about humans.
There is no room for doubt about this, as the rationality of plant structure clearly indicates that they have evolved with an emphasis on efficiency in maintaining life.

Some people say that plants are important. They think, "Acorns are what allow brown bears to live."
However, from the plant's perspective, the result of their desperate efforts to survive has been advantageous for other living things.
The natural world is made up of a chain of such advantages. To live is to keep others alive.
Within this chain, there is no distinction between humans, nature, and the universe.

It may seem like an exaggeration, but the water is actually pulsating and the light is actually reflecting.

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