For millennia, humanity has pondered life's ultimate meaning.
From classical philosophy to spiritual doctrines, answers have been as varied as they've been elusive.
While Camus' Absurdism confronted us with the anguish of a silent universe, Neuroabsurdism offers a radically different - and profoundly hopeful - vision.
Neuroabsurdism doesn't seek preexisting meaning. It invites us to create it.
The key to fulfillment lies not in external quests, but in genuine internal action - for fear's deepest root is the impossibility of being oneself.
Study 1
Neuroabsurdism's core axiom: We access fulfillment by acting on our vocation - what we love doing. When committed to our passion, our brain aligns, fear dissipates, and we unlock an authentic, meaningful existence.
If life grants no inherent purpose, what then is existence for?
Neuroabsurdism responds brilliantly: Life's ultimate function is to serve as the canvas for unlimited diversity - an ecosystem supporting infinite expressions of being.
In this grand design, a giraffe has one purpose: to be a giraffe. Should it aspire otherwise, the system fractures.
Unlike animals that simply consume what they need to exist, humans try to mold reality to their desires - disrupting nature's balance.
Our fundamental purpose mirrors all species': to be ourselves. Not just for personal happiness, but because only through this can we maintain the interconnected equilibrium of existence.
Any attempt to impose external meaning that negates our essence violates natural law and life's true function: self-expression.
In this light, life isn't a problem to solve, but an opportunity to manifest.