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Stanford's Dave Evans argues that searching for a single, ultimate meaning of life is a trap because humans are constantly "becoming." A more productive approach is to focus on the active process of designing meaning into your current circumstances, treating it as an ongoing project rather than a final answer to find.
Stop searching for your purpose as if it's a hidden object. Instead, create it. Ask 'why' you do something and build an empowering vision around it. This created context provides resilience when challenges inevitably arise, reminding you what you're up to.
Purpose isn't a pre-existing truth you find, like an archaeological dig. It's something you actively build, like an architect. You choose an area of interest, invest energy to build skill, and it transforms into a passion through a feedback loop of personal fascination and external validation.
The common advice to 'find your purpose' can be counterproductive. It boxes you into a static self-identity, creating friction and existential crises whenever you grow or your interests change. A more flexible approach is to focus on a set of core values that guide you, rather than a single, reductive 'purpose'.
Tyson reframes the search for meaning as a powerless act, as if it's an object waiting to be found. He advocates for creating meaning through daily actions: learning new things, lessening the suffering of others, and converting knowledge into wisdom. This gives individuals agency over their purpose.
Our outcome-obsessed culture treats purpose like a goal to be 'found' or 'achieved.' A healthier view is that purpose is an aspirational trajectory—a direction you repeatedly choose to move toward. This shifts the focus from a final state to the meaningfulness of the journey itself.
Instead of asking the passive question, 'What is the meaning of life?', a more potent tool for self-discovery is to ask, 'What would I be willing to die for?' This reframes meaning as an active declaration of ultimate value, forcing a confrontation with one's deepest convictions and purpose.
The search for a single, true purpose is flawed because humans are dynamic and constantly evolving. Instead, focus on living purposefully by ensuring your actions, beliefs, and identity are in alignment. This makes meaning an active, ongoing process rather than a final destination to be found.
Instead of getting stuck on huge, unanswerable questions, design thinking reframes them into solvable problems. 'What is the meaning of life?' becomes 'How might I live a more meaningful life now?' This shifts the focus from an ultimate answer to immediate, practical steps.
A purposeful life can be framed as one that actively creates order and value (e.g., knowledge, peace, beauty) in a universe naturally tending towards chaos. Our best "mattering projects" align with this cosmic, counter-entropic struggle, giving life meaning.
The popular idea of "self-actualization" or becoming all you can be is impossible, as one lifetime can't express your full potential. A more meaningful aim is to be "fully alive" by being fully present and choosing which parts of yourself to explore now.