So...I noticed Andrew Yang has a podcast scheduled for tomorrow with Arthur C. Brooks, a conservative who wants to offer a "practical science based plan to find purpose through transcendence, vocation, and love, drawing on philosophy and faith traditions." And...I cringe. Because when I look into it, he's promoting stuff like "faith" and "family" and "work", and all I see is the conservative worldview. Ya know, the one that I left that assumes that we need these things in order to be functional human beings. It's total BS. Anyway the book isn't out, i haven't read it, I don't plan to, but I do want to address this issue from an actual humanist perspective, given I would also say that human centered capitalism is fundamentally based on such a perspective.
On meaning
The concept of meaning in some objective sense is a human created concept. it's our attempt to find our place in this cold and uncaring universe of ours. On a subjective, personal level, this is fine. People can believe whatever they want, and live it out insofar as they don't harm others. But what I resent is this idea that we NEED meaning and blah blah blah and therefore let's force everyone to work and all. The protestant work ethic is BS, it really is. It's just a narrative that came from the more repressive versions of Christianity that was adopted by rich people to turn us into an army of wage slaves who think the meaning of our lives is to do labor for them. And I fear that this book, and that seems to be what reviews so far indicate from past books that this guy wrote on similar topics, just ends up reflecting. I mean, this guy writes a lot of books and most of them are pretty conservative in their orientation.
Anyway, from a humanist perspective, THERE IS NO MEANING. The universe is cold and uncaring. It doesn't give us a purpose. There is no cosmic reason for us all to be here, we just are, and you know what? My own take is that you might as well enjoy it and live on your own terms, not terms dictated to you by other people.
In a lot of ways, my take on the meaningless of life is similar to Camus and absurdism. Try as we might to challenge the idea of the absurd, the absurdity is the reality, and we might as well accept it. but for me, this isn't a bad thing. It's FREEING. It means you dont have to really be doing anything with your life at any given point. Life is a sandbox. Enjoy it. Live it on your terms. Do what you want. I'm not to judge. I don't wanna tell people what to do, what I dont like is others telling me what to do, and thats where the mental illness comes in.
Why purposeless people are mentally ill
There's a lot of talk about why people who lack purpose are mentally ill, not well adjusted, and why we need structure in our lives. In my view, it ultimately comes down to this. It's anomie. A mismatch between society's value and reality. We impose a lot of idealistic crap on people about work and purpose and when life doesnt turn out that way for a lot of us, we become disaffected and feel depressed. We see good things happening to others, and we wonder why we cant have that picturesque life. We feel like something is wrong with us, because society tells us something is wrong with us. The protestant work ethic is a cure looking for a disease, and the disease manifests itself in a self fulfilling prophecy.
The solution to anomie is to get society working according to the values, or to realign the values to the reality of society. For the most part, most of these self help books are about realigning us to conform to society's values. But what if you dont want to conform to those values? What if, much like myself, you kinda view work as a sisyphusian task. A pointless bunch of BS we have to do, that we wish we didnt have to do, but society insists that we have to do it for our own good? Well, then this crap becomes spiritual violence. And when mental illness happens, we say, "see, if only their outlook conformed to the values of our society, they'd be better off." So a lot of people think the solution is trying to make everyone conform to this weird idea of what society is and should be to stave off existential dread.
This is ironically why we still have to work so hard in the 21st century. Working hours kept going down until the great depression. Then FDR went all hardcore pro work because people feared a future in which we didn't have to work and thus wouldnt have it structure our lives. But for me, I don't fear that future, because Im not conservative brained and accept that BS. I'm this nihilist/absurdist type who sees this stuff as spiritual violence and wants liberation from this.
And that's the thing. If you get out of "the cave" like I have, you dont wanna go back. It all seems so fake. The puppet show that is life for many people doesnt do it for me any more. But all these cave dwellers keep insisting i need purpose in my life blah blah blah.
That's basically akin to telling me to go back in the cave, forget all I learned, and to stfu and enjoy the puppet show.
No, I don't wanna do that, I want liberation.
Again, it's fine if these people want to live their lives that way, but I feel like im too smart to follow them. I know too much, I've seen too much. The illusions and delusions the common people of this reality accept don't do it for me any more, I want something different. But I cant have it different because the whole cave relies on keeping this illusion up...forever.
And that's why I would say I feel whatever depression and angst over the situation that I do. Because I dont wanna live my life according to THEIR rules and THEIR expectations, but according to my own. But I'm bad for that because I need Jesus or some crap.
It's all worldview, it all goes back to the cave, blah blah blah.
Human centered capitalism is intended to free humans from this prison
So this is where I get super critical of andrew yang platforming this guy, and shows once again why this guy is so cringe sometimes. love the dude for his 2020 campaign, but I don't think he really understands this stuff on as deep of a level as, say, I do. Again, human centered capitalism as a concept was created in part by me back in the early/mid 2010s. It was a culmination of my leaving "the cave" that is Christianity, dealing with all of these existential questions myself, and finding my own answers. Ya know, something a lot of people seem deathly afraid of.
The capitalism part is me expanding a humanist philosophy into economics, rejecting the protestant work ethic and replacing it with a secular ethos instead. It can be said that another pillar of the idea I've considered floating is "there is no purpose but that which we create for ourselves." Because my ideas are functionally a rejection of the protestant work ethic, I wanted to replace it with a more nihilistic/absurdist take, but rather than view it negatively in ways that cause us to fall into despair, I see it as liberating. Because, in my worldview, the wealthy and powerful use these ideas of purpose to enslave us. All of this stuff is a massive psy op on us to make us wanna work for a living producing stuff for rich people. It's like bioshock infinite and all that dystopian propaganda you see everywhere trying to convince people to wanna work and not ask for more. Same thing here. Heck, i recognized when I first played bioshock infinite in 2013 that it kind of was analogous to our own society and how so much effort is spent wanting to keep us these docile little wage slaves.
So...for me, UBI and this whole idea of wanting to liberate people from work is just...a natural downstream logical conclusion of my assumptions.
1) There is no purpose but that which we make for ourselves
2) Our society is like a matrix, with rich people using religion to turn us into docile wage slaves
3) People fear secular humanism because it frees us from this matrix, allowing us to realize that their ideas are nonsense, and allowing us to build our ideas on a new set of principles.
After looking at the practical solutions to our problems, I concluded that policies like UBI, medicare for all (single payer at the time, public option now as i refine paying for these ideas), and free college/student debt forgiveness would help get us there. They would create a blueprint for a society in which over time, as the economy continues to grow, we'd be able to free ourselves from work. It allows those who wanna work to work, recognizing that some wont want to be "unplugged", and recognizing that we cant have a society without labor in the first place, but it also liberates those who dont wanna. Basically, because life is a choose your own adventure sandbox anyway, it allows people to choose, recognizing that pluralistically, we dont all think the same, we want different things, and again, in a society in which we all want different things and arent the same, that we should allow that diversity to manifest in different decisions.
The christians believe god put them here to work? let them work as they want to. I dont believe their nonsense? Let me alone and let me live on UBI. it's quite simple.
The problem is that christian nationalist types often arent the live and let live types. They're the types of people who believe that their ideas came from god himself, that human nature is evil, and that people need to be forced into their way of living "for their own good." And that's where a lot of these do gooder conservative mindsets come from. It's a worldview, issue, it's always a worldview issue. Except, I kinda recognize the world should be pluralistic, and these guys...dont. Because im libertarian, and they're authoritarian.
Again, it all comes back to worldviews.
Which is why I get disappointed when someone like yang platforms this guy and has weirdly conservative mindsets on work and purpose at times. I mean, to be fair, yang got most of his ideas from the UBI community but seems to have at best a surface level idea of them, I mean, he's never been the best representative of the movement. I just glaze the guy so much because he's like the only mainstream figure who has tried to advance ANY iteration of these ideas.
But yeah, can't say I'm a fan of this stuff.
Conclusion
So, like everything, it all comes back to worldviews. This whole "humans need purpose" nonsense is a bunch of crap that comes from protestant christianity whether directly or indirectly. While it has some observed reality in science, I view it as a self fulfilling prophecy. Of course when you teach people the world is supposed to work a certain way and your life should follow some kind of script and your life deviates from the script, you're gonna be miserable and depressed. But then when the disappointment wears off, it becomes liberating. But then when you realize that society tries to force you to live a certain way against your natual rhythm in life, it becomes miserable again. because you're not allowed to live as you want, because of these authoritarian do gooders shoving their ideas down your throat.
And that's how I see this. I beleive nihilism is the best way to approach purpose. There is no purpose but that which we create for ourselves. This should be liberating, and allow us to live as we want without expectations, but then people are jerks who dont allow you to do this. And most dont think as deeply as I have about this, so they keep falling back into various levels of the cave.
And that's kind of the problem with society in general. While we're democratic, the elites control the info the masses get and then they govern by tyranny of the majority, with the stupid people outnumbering and outvoting the smart. It's the core reason why everything is messed up. Sadly, the whole purpose thing goes beyond just republicans and into the dems, but the dems kinda just capitulate to conservative values and just offer a weaker version of the same thing.
I try to offer the opposite "pole" here to go back to my discussion on centrism. The republicans offer conservative christianity and all of the metaphysical baggage to go along with it, and I offer secular progressivism in response. All my ideas naturally flow from my core assumptions about the world, and I feel comfortable in defending them.
For me, my own purpose is, ironically, to spread this knowledge. I dont wanna do pointless work for pointless pay. or wait for Jesus to come back on a winged horse because the war in Iran triggered the apocalypse. I wanna enjoy my life and not waste it doing what other people say for no good reason. Again, religious people wanna live their lives according to that stuff, that's fine. I just resent them trying to shove their crap down my throat.
And yeah. That's how I view it as a human centered capitalist myself. Remember, for me, humanism is where the human centered aspect comes from. It's secular humanism applied to economics. Which means a rejection of all of that metaphysical crap associated with christianity, which includes the concept of live having some sort of external objective meaning. My views are about liberating people from the conservative and christian way of doing things and letting them live life on their own terms. While that might be scary for some, well, I kinda believe we need a mass society wide existential crisis anyway. And I'd rather challenge existing assumptions than just concede the argument to their perspective.