The nature of mattering is you want to make a difference to something that would exist or have a value even if you did not exist. As long as you have good reason, and we could talk about what that might mean to believe or more appropriately to sense, it doesn't need to be purely subjective. And people will want it to be significantly real or deeply real in some important ways.
John Vervaeke is a cognitive scientist at the University of Toronto and world renowned thinker, bridging science and spirituality in order to understand the experience of meaningfulness: how to cultivate it and why it’s crucial for human beings.
John joins me to discuss “the meaning crisis”—the global phenomenon of modern humans having access to so much, and yet so little profundity. Referencing neurobiology, faith and behavioural science, John explains the impact the meaning crisis is having on individuals all around the world, and what to do about it.
We then explore its intersection with the metacrisis, and the historical traditions which are the root of our global energy, economic and climate crisis. Critically, John says we cannot solve the climate crisis without addressing the cultural forces driving the meaning crisis
Planet: Critical investigates why the world is in crisis—and what to do about it.
© Rachel Donald
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