A conceptualization of the universe as a nonrandom entity in light of a universal particular established from certain descriptive properties of space, but randomly behaving at all perspectives, is proposed as a outline for the interpretation of nature. This view enables the construction of a natural ethic in which many of the orderly conducts of science become exposed as inductive, falling short of being logically sound and valid, result in false interpretations and a permissiveness with the environment that is potentially damaging to the freedoms for processes that are entailed and encompass, in definition, nature. Reference is made to an alphabet of mathematics, in contrast to a mathematics of an alphabet to exemplify the distinction between a non random universe with a contents of randomly behaving elements at all perspectives. More important to the navigation of nature is an understanding of the alphabet of the logics involved in the perecption and representation of ythe environment rather than a mathematics that catalogues and catagorizes causes and effects from a "neutral", strained for objectivity, statistical perspective.
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