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  • People nowadays often say, sometimes in a sad way, other times more aggressively and cynically,

  • that life just has no meaning.

  • Two reasons are often given for this.

  • The first has to do with religion.

  • Once upon a time, so the story goes, life had a clear meaning given to us by God;

  • it was about worshiping him,

  • but as religious belief has declined, not only has God supposedly died,

  • but along with him, the meaning he once guaranteed.

  • Modern science is the second course at the current crisis of meaning. Scientists tell us that

  • life

  • which emerged from a random interplay of chemicals and gases

  • does have a meaning but it's of a rather bleak, relentless, and narrow sort.

  • For humans as for all other living things like amoeba

  • the meaning of life is survival and the propagation of one's genetic material

  • It sounds very true and at the same time distinctly futile and melancholy.

  • Here we want to argue as follows: to wonder about the meaning of life

  • is an extremely important activity, life does have substantial meaning

  • And there are in fact a range of practical steps we can take

  • to ensure we end up leading lives of maximal meaningfulness.

  • We should stop by saying that there is no meaning in life

  • outside of that which we can find by ourselves as a species

  • there isn't any kind of objective meaning written in the stars

  • in a holy book or in sequences of DNA. What seems to prompt people to complain

  • that life lacks meaning

  • are particular varieties of unhappiness. Let's consider some central examples

  • you're in a relationship but the intensity you experienced at the start

  • is long gone

  • you don't seem to talk about anything important anymore or share vulnerable

  • feelings and ideas.

  • It feels, as you put it, meaningless or else you're single and though you have

  • many friends

  • every time you see them the conversation seems shallow and trivial

  • or you're at University studying for a degree. You signed up for the course

  • in part because you often feel confused about who you are and what you want

  • you thought that reading books and going to lectures would shine a light on things,

  • but the topics of Darwin disconnected from your confusion.

  • You complained that it feels meaningless.

  • Or you're working in a large profitable company

  • and earning a decent sum every week, but the work doesn't seem in the grandeur scheme

  • important by which you mean two things: that you don't seem to be making any

  • great difference to anyone's life

  • and also that there's no profound part of you that you're able to bring to or

  • incorporate in your work;

  • it might as well be done by robots. From these strands

  • we can start to extrapolate a theory of meaning.

  • Meaning is to be found in three activities in particular

  • Communication; Understanding and Service

  • Let's look at communication first. We are, by nature

  • isolated creatures and it appears that some of our most meaningful moments

  • are to do with instances of connection, with the lover for example

  • when we reveal our intimate physical and psychological selves

  • when we form friendships with substantial truths about our respective

  • lives can be shared

  • all on a journey to a new country when we strike up a conversation with a

  • stranger

  • and feel a thrilling sense of victory over linguistic and cultural barriers

  • then there's the meaning that emerges via understanding

  • this is about the pleasure that can be felt whenever we correct confusion and

  • puzzlement about ourselves or the world

  • we might be scientific researchers or economists

  • poets or patients in psychotherapy. The pleasure of our activities

  • stems from a common ability to map and make sense of what was once

  • painfully unfamiliar and strange

  • Thirdly, there is service, one of the most meaningful things we can do

  • is to serve other people, to try to improve their lives

  • either by alleviating sources of suffering

  • or else by generating new sources of pleasure

  • that includes medical professionals but also people who bake cakes, write songs

  • or dance for a living

  • we're often told to think of ourselves as inherently selfish

  • but some of the most meaningful moments come when we can transcend our egos

  • and put ourselves at the service of others or the planet

  • one should add that in order for service to feel meaningful

  • it has to be in sync with our own native sincere interests

  • it's a case of knowing enough about ourselves to find a particular path to service.

  • Armed with such ideas, we can move towards defining nothing less

  • than the meaning of life. The meaning of life is to pursue human flourishing

  • through communication, understanding and service.

  • We may not have meaningful lives yet but it's central to affirm

  • that the concept of a meaningful life is eminently plausible

  • and that it comprises elements that can be clearly named

  • and gradually fought for.

People nowadays often say, sometimes in a sad way, other times more aggressively and cynically,

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