The Principle of Balance
We know from Billy’s writings (e.g. in his book ‘Genesis’) that one of the 7 basic components of the Law of Sevenness is the principle of balance.
It is found in the interplay of heavenly bodies and atoms, in the interplay of bodily organs (homeostasis, e.g., the pancreas producing glucagon or insulin to raise or lower the body’s glucose levels) and in the interplay of living beings.
E.g. we know from the CRs that the chicken is a descendant of Tyrannus Saurus Rex , the pig a descendant of the ruthless predator Entelodont (CR 215: 51-53) and the sheep a descendant of the aggressive Endrosacus, the largest predator that lived after the dinosaurs (CR 215: 60). So, the animals that provide the meat we eat today – they were in pre-human times aggressive predators killing many of their fellow animals. It is a grim reminder that those who cause great suffering to their fellow living beings are held to a/c at a later time.
(Details see https://www.futureofmankind.co.uk/Billy_Meier/Contact_Report_215)
The regulative / creative function of opposites was as well known in ancient Greece and ancient China:
“… Cold things warm up, the hot cools off, the wet becomes dry, the dry becomes wet -
Sooner or later, everything runs into its opposite …Heraclitus called this natural principle “enantiodromia” (Gr.) aka “running contrariwise”.” (Heraclitus)
https://iep.utm.edu/heraclit/
“When yang (the masculine) reaches its extreme, yin (the feminine) appears.
When yin reaches its extreme, yang appears again.” (Confucius)
C.G. Jung, the Swiss psychoanalyst who founded analytical psychology used this term to describe “the emergence of the unconscious opposite in the course of time“:
“According to the principle of compensation that runs through all of nature, all psychic development, whether individual or collective, has an optimum that, when exceeded, produces enantiodromia, that is, it becomes its opposite.” (Carl Jung)
Details see
https://exploringyourmind.com/enantiodromia-the-emergence-of-your-unconscious-opposite/
So, in everything there are opposite forces that complement each other: Light cannot exist without darkness, days are only meaningful because there are nights and the meaning of life becomes clear due to its complement, death.
"Everything arises in this way, opposites from their opposites."
(Plato in Phaedo/sect. 71a)
This should give us some food for thought when contemplating our world’s extreme political polarization in which “political extremes emerge to 'seesaw' the other” The great majority of humans, they want to live in peace, So, why can there not be any dialogue?
Edgar Cayce may have foreseen a future without political extremes aka “communism and capitalism”. In 1944, just months before his death he predicted:
“What then of nations? In R. there comes the hope of the world, not as that sometimes termed of the Communistic, of the Bolshevistic; no. But freedom, freedom! That each man will live for his fellow man! The principle has been born. It will take years for it to be crystallized, but out of R. comes again the hope of the world. Guided by what? That friendship with the nation that hath even set on its present monetary unit "In God We Trust." (Edgar Cayce, Reading 3976-29)
https://www.edgarcayce.org/about-us/blog/blog-posts/out-of-russia-will-come-hope/
One may be tempted to assign this statement to the era of Gorbachev.
But it seems more likely Edgar Cayce's vision was of a post-Communist (post-Capitalist) era.
One can only hope that the insight "we. the humans of the Earth share a common fate" (e.g. diverting Apophis) will arise, in the East and West, before it is too late.