Panthropic abuse is Schrodinger’s Role made absolute

Panthropic abuse is the absolute persecution of ego-formation and ownership, enforced from the very beginning—before birth—through externally imposed frameworks that dictate every aspect of existence. It is not about repression/oppression or erasure, because there was never an allowed ego to suppress or erase. It is total preemptive negation—an ontological nullification—where the person is engineered, not merely controlled.

The individual is not recognized as an autonomous being but is instead forced into a predetermined role that serves external interests. This role is not a static identity but a dynamic function, manipulated at will by those in power. The external system does not merely influence or shape the person—it dictates their entire existence, leaving no space for personal volition, self-actualization, or even internal ownership.

Panthropic abuse is Schrodinger’s Role made absolute. The person both exists and does not exist, forced to endure without being permitted to be. It is a state where everything is real, and everything is mutually exclusive—a paradox engineered to maintain absolute control. 

Schrödinger's Role, refers to Schrödinger's cat 

Schrödinger's cat is a thought experiment devised by Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger in 1935 to illustrate the paradoxes and counterintuitive nature of quantum mechanics, particularly the concept of superposition. It was intended as a critique of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, which suggests that particles exist in all possible states simultaneously until observed.
The Setup:
  1. A cat is placed inside a sealed box.
  1. The box contains:
  • A radioactive atom with a 50% chance of decaying within an hour.
  • A Geiger counter to detect radioactive decay.
  • A vial of poison that will be released if the Geiger counter detects decay.
  1. The cat's fate depends entirely on whether the radioactive atom decays:
  • If the atom decays, the Geiger counter triggers the release of poison, killing the cat.
  • If the atom does not decay, the cat remains alive.
The Paradox:
According to quantum mechanics, the radioactive atom exists in a superposition of decayed and undecayed states until it is measured or observed. By extension, this implies that the cat is simultaneously both dead and alive inside the box until someone opens it and observes the outcome.
Implications:
Schrödinger's cat illustrates the strangeness of quantum superposition and the problem of measurement in quantum mechanics. It raises questions about the role of observation in determining the state of a quantum system and whether superposition applies to macroscopic objects like cats.
Schrödinger himself introduced the idea to highlight what he saw as the absurdity of applying quantum mechanics to everyday objects, sparking ongoing philosophical and scientific debates.

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