Entry – Jonathan Olvera Location Function & Numerical Value
Entry – Jonathan Olvera
Location Function & Numerical Value
Objective: Understanding the location of water accessibility
In my current exploration, the first priority is water—its accessibility, distribution, and the way we can measure its functional value in both human and environmental systems. Water is not just a substance we drink; it is a living measure of survival, industry, and renewal. By assigning a numerical value to its presence in given locations, we can begin to treat it not as an afterthought but as a primary objective in the economy of resources.
Resource Utilization & Carbon Molecule Experimentation
My work has led me toward experimenting with carbon molecules in triangular structures, reminiscent of PESTLE analysis but focused on density and adaptability. The goal: producing isometric carbon and metal structures that convert pulp and waste into usable forms—what I call Health Currency.
This is not merely recycling. It is transformation. It is about building alloys and new powders that consumers can rely on: materials that carry value both in commerce and in wellbeing.
Biochemical Insight & Digestive Systems
Nature has already perfected transformation. Animal digestion itself is a reminder of how intake and output can provide balance, nourishment, and energy. Studying this process helps us understand how organic congestion—the waste we overlook—can instead become a nutrient cycle in our technological systems.
Culture, Faith & Oversight
No innovation exists in a vacuum. Religion, belief, and cultural systems often act as overseers, shaping what we collect, consume, and value. My vision is not about more control but less—allowing religion and manifest principles to guide collection and transformation, while still ensuring freedom of choice and innovation.
Closing Thought
Water, carbon, alloys, biochemicals, and faith—all these elements connect. They are not separate disciplines but a single woven system. In designing resources that align with both science and human spirit, we begin to create structures of renewal: from waste into value, from scarcity into health, from control into freedom.
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