Logistics

Logistics

 

Logistics is defined as the process of moving goods and services. This is a process which usually entails a hierarchical organization of resources, so as to allow for an effective and optimal distribution of goods and services. Operations which include logistical efforts are often defined by the goods and services being produced, but even with the abundant array of products which find place within the above definition, there is a central element consistent with most operations. It is exemplified by the simple articulation of goal setting and goal completion. Setting goals serves as the first point of address, and completing said goals is the subsequent consequence, assuming necessary action has been taken.

Applied philosophy works well in this duality, as it falls within the laywork of start and finish with succinct clarity. All wisdom originates from some point, otherwise it would not exist, and as a compounding notion, there is rarely a clear cut two fold ultimatum of concise finality, such as that depicted above, within any field of study, discipline, or simple line of thought. 

Duality works best when it is not beleaguered by the ill fate of opposites. As an example, polarity does not exist to delineate opposites, and when taken further as an abstraction of bipolarity, philosophical fundamentalities become wrought with examples of yin yang dynamics. Dynamics such as this are oriented around evenness, as opposed to separation. One does not repel or oppose the other, instead, they both work together to establish balance.

Wisdom of this sort flows from logistical operations that find a well built fundamental basis cemented with complexity. Logistics requires a goal and completion, and the duality found naturally in this paradigm speaks to the symbiosis of healthy logistical operations. When balance is incorporated into all elements present within any logistical setting, the two objectives of setting and completing play out as symbiotic feats. What could be seen as an initial call and response inevitably arrives at a place of mutual fluidity. This kind of balanced fluidity is epitomized in applied philosophy, as the applicability of mutual perpetuity finds a stronger rooting in the throes of its design when compared to a start and finish or call and response dynamic.

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