J350
Modernity negates meaning.
- Joined
- Dec 3, 2025
- Posts
- 60
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people increasingly devote their lives to activities that have no inherent necessity. these activities are pursued because the individual feels an internal pressure to exert effort and to achieve goals, yet no real demands are imposed by the environment.
the individual is therefore placed in an artificial condition. he is active, but not required. he struggles, but nothing depends on the outcome.
this produces a persistent sense of emptiness.
in earlier conditions, effort was inseparable from survival. food had to be obtained. shelter had to be maintained. failure had immediate and concrete consequences. the individual’s actions directly determined whether he and those dependent on him would endure.
tn the modern environment, this relation has been severed. survival is managed by large systems. the individual’s role is marginal. his absence changes nothing. he is replaceable.
the instinct for purposeful action does not disappear under these conditions. It is redirected.
people invent goals. they construct challenges. they compete over symbols. they refine skills that are impressive but unnecessary. these pursuits are treated as serious, yet they remain detachable from reality. they can be abandoned at any time without genuine cost.
such activities imitate necessity without possessing it.
they provide temporary structure, but no final satisfaction. each completed goal leaves the underlying problem unchanged. the individual must therefore seek a new objective. the cycle continues indefinitely.
no accumulation of substitutes can resolve this condition.
an activity that can be discarded without consequence cannot provide stable meaning. an effort that affects nothing beyond the individual’s internal state will always feel insubstantial, even if it is socially rewarded.
the human organism was not adapted for a life in which nothing truly depends on it.
until effort is once again connected to outcomes that are real, irreversible, and material, people will remain restless. they will remain busy. and they will continue to mistake motion for purpose.
the individual is therefore placed in an artificial condition. he is active, but not required. he struggles, but nothing depends on the outcome.
this produces a persistent sense of emptiness.
in earlier conditions, effort was inseparable from survival. food had to be obtained. shelter had to be maintained. failure had immediate and concrete consequences. the individual’s actions directly determined whether he and those dependent on him would endure.
tn the modern environment, this relation has been severed. survival is managed by large systems. the individual’s role is marginal. his absence changes nothing. he is replaceable.
the instinct for purposeful action does not disappear under these conditions. It is redirected.
people invent goals. they construct challenges. they compete over symbols. they refine skills that are impressive but unnecessary. these pursuits are treated as serious, yet they remain detachable from reality. they can be abandoned at any time without genuine cost.
such activities imitate necessity without possessing it.
they provide temporary structure, but no final satisfaction. each completed goal leaves the underlying problem unchanged. the individual must therefore seek a new objective. the cycle continues indefinitely.
no accumulation of substitutes can resolve this condition.
an activity that can be discarded without consequence cannot provide stable meaning. an effort that affects nothing beyond the individual’s internal state will always feel insubstantial, even if it is socially rewarded.
the human organism was not adapted for a life in which nothing truly depends on it.
until effort is once again connected to outcomes that are real, irreversible, and material, people will remain restless. they will remain busy. and they will continue to mistake motion for purpose.

