The wiki article is however strangely related to the themes of Robotech, mainly the Robotech Master's culture and the Invid "Flower of Life".
Source : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mo_(religion)
198. Most Zhuang follow a traditional animist faith known as Shigongism or Moism, which include elements of ancestor worship. The Mo have their own sutra and professional priests known as bu mo who traditionally use chicken bones for divination. In Moism, the creator is known as Bu Luotuo and the universe is tripartite, with all things composed from the three elements of heaven, earth, and water.
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The religion is animistic, teaching that spirits are present in everything. The spirits are seen as immortal and subject to changes in mood. Mo exhibits totemism and the cult of reproduction.
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201. In Mo, Bu Luotuo is considered the supreme god, creator and the founder of the religion.
The Flower Mother, Me Hoa, is seen as the creator of humanity and Bu Luotuo's wife. As the goddess of reproduction, she is seen as governing a large garden of golden flowers (boys) and silver flowers (girls). Whoever behaves with good sense and sentiment will receive good flowers (i.e. good children), while those who behave with bad sense receive bad flowers.
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202. In Mo, spirits are thought to be present in everything, and even inanimate things such as water are considered to have souls. Mo spirits include deities and ancestors as well as devils.
People are considered to have three souls after death: One goes to the sky, one to the cemetery and one comes back to the deceased’s family. Souls of the dead enter a netherworld but can continue to assist the living. According to the religion, people who have died by violence can become evil spirits.
Here... Let's give a little context :
The idea to divide everything as a tripartite equivalent of the Flower of Life is present in every aspect of the Tirolian "Master" culture.
While this is never really explained in depth, these aspects are present in the muse triumvirates as "Action", "Mind", and "Feelings". Which are roughly equivalent, at least to my knowledge, to the Chinese metaphors for "Earth", "Heaven", and "Water".
Robotech does have "immortal" characters such as the multiversal singularities known as "The Regiss (Regess)", and Haydon. Both have been demonstrated to be related to great mood swings. The Regess by suddenly leaving Earth and then (in the RNU) renouncing to evolution as a failed and trapped enterprise, or now in the Titan version (soon to be continued in Remix) as trying to take on the whole damn multiverse by herself! Haydon is less clear since it was mostly a planning intelligence, but then you have his children, the Haydonites, which alternately help increase human technology, then go at war with them for the same reason.
The flower itself needs incredibly complex factors in order to prosper, most being related to the flora, fauna, and potential for long term evolution on a planet.
It was also presented as being an agent of intelligent design through the RNU and later comics such as "Clone" and "Mordecai". Though the actual results might have been collateral damages, since the real protoculture consciousness has been presented as from another universe.
The theme of the "Cult of Reproduction" is prevalent in the whole Robotech Universe. The flower craves species that evolves through sexual dismorphism in order to form a relationship of food / pollinator. Deities / immortal rulers comes into male / female schism. War are mostly resolved through the attraction of opposites.
Indeed, the most potent symbols used during campaigns were "love" and quite literally "a baby".
In some ways, the "Flower of life" is the mother of a space born humanity. (One could also relate the old RNU idea that the flower came originally from Earth.)
It is also what gave the Invid a way out of their savage nature... And the Master's empire would never have endured for so long without it.
The Invid Regess was once the ruler over a garden of flowers.
Often represented with a silvery shine and golden pollen.
https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/rob ... 0817001442
Those that use protoculture peacefully, or for their own survival, usually end up victorious and most powerful; while those who tries and use it for less ethical aims ends up in crumbling dark ages and, sometime, quite literally as mutated and impotent flowers themselves. (See Lazlo Zand - RNU.)
In Dana's vision, she is revealed to her three selves. While she is potentially laying dead from overdose on the floor, another one has a vision from far away... of her family. While in Robotech this doesn't mean they are dead, what about the original Southern Cross vision?
While it is evident that "objects having souls" has been used and re-used by different authors, most of them no longer considered canon, the flower of life itself, and Inorganics, are still strongly related to that idea.
The soul of the dead can clearly continue to assist the living if you consider the use made of Zor's brain. (Which would logically not be the only brain used that way, if the technology was ready and well-known by his corpse's arrival.) And Zor himself, killed during conflict, certainly turns vengeful and borderline devoid of empathy when he comes back as Zor Prime.
So... Coincidence?
Does anyone thinks or knows if this might have been the inspiration behind any of the mythos?
I'm wondering if I should dig deeper into this, or if the surface similarities are just a nice touch for some characters.