Owing to its agricultural roots, settled societies tend to place a premium on stability and order. When you rely on growing crops in place, year after year, you have to stay put, and the conditions of the growing season need to remain within a favorable range for those crops to flourish and for harvests to remain bountiful.
It is no surprise then that one of the most voracious appetites for modern industrial civilization is for the steady increase of mobility and the ever-accelerating rate of movement, coupled with the energy-expending manipulation of time, such as with refrigeration and food preservation and heating and climate control for growing certain crops.
Here there is a way to surmount the most structurally prominent barriers to a settled society, so that spiritually it can always remain in place, while at the same time occupying everything everywhere at once, annihilating time and space to move to where it wants when it wants without giving up its presence from where it departs, to continuously grow and accumulate power.