From Masters to Witnesses: What It Means to Be Human in a Conscious Universe
Every human life begins with an unanswered question: why is there a world that appears to me at all? Before we learn any scientific language, before we acquire theories of matter or mind, we wake into lived experience — color, warmth, sound, presence. Whatever the universe may be in itself, we only ever encounter it as something that shows up for a conscious subject. This is not a philosophical curiosity. It is the most immediate fact of existence. Yet the culture we have inherited tells a very different story. For most of modern history, we have been taught to inhabit a disenchanted cosmos: a vast, silent machine of dead matter governed by cold equations, in which consciousness is a freak accident — a brief flicker of light in a human brain produced by evolutionary luck. In this story, mind is our private invention, intelligence begins with us, and the universe beyond us is fundamentally mindless. This is the myth of Human Centrality , and it has shaped science, technology, and ethics...