
📍 Venue: Albano, House 4, 3rd Floor, Hörsal 6
Renowned thinker John Vervaeke delivers this profound and thought-provoking lecture exploring one of the most pressing challenges of our time: humanity's entrapment in the Meaning Crisis — and the path toward reconnection.
Vervaeke argues that human beings possess a fundamental, irreducible need for connection — a need that operates across three distinct dimensions:
This connectedness, Vervaeke contends, flows from our constitution as beings defined by anticipatory attunement in relevance realization — a capacity that is not optional but fundamentally binding. It binds us to ourselves, to each other, and to the world around us.
This religio (binding) manifests as two meta-desires Plato identified:
Rather than experienced as compulsion, this binding is felt as a voluntary necessity — a calling encountered through love, beauty, flow, and reason. It is precisely this sense of meaning — of being called — that has been eroded by the Meaning Crisis.
The loss of meaning generates both existential inertia (difficulty breaking free) and existential ignorance (uncertainty about what transformation is even needed).
Once the functionality and phenomenology of meaning are properly understood, Vervaeke argues that recovery requires non-propositional forms of knowing, structured into an ecology of practices encompassing:
Crucially, this ecology must be guided by a meta-practice of pilgrimage — one that properly orients us toward responding to the Meaning Crisis and opens the door to an advent of the sacred, taking seriously the deeply participatory nature of meaning.
Albanovägen 10, 114 19 Stockholm
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