What the Universe Wants
A page from What the Universe Wants — the closing

Go Live a Great Life

or, an experiment with no simulation

When you read enough wisdom traditions — not as dogma, just as data, the way you might read field reports from civilizations that never met — you start to notice they keep arriving at the same insights. Not similar insights. The same insights, dressed in different metaphors.

The Hindu Upanishads say tat tvam asi: thou art that. You are not connected to the divine; you are it, wearing a costume. The Sufis said you are not a drop in the ocean, you are the ocean in a drop. Buddhism said there is no separate self. Christ said the kingdom of God is within you. The Mayan Popol Vuh said heart of sky, heart of earth. The Hermetic texts said all is one. Quantum field theory, of all things, says something that, if you squint and translate, is uncomfortably close: the underlying substance is a single field, and what we call particles are perturbations of it.

Civilizations that did not share a language, did not exchange goods, were separated by oceans and millennia, kept writing the same paragraph.

This is interesting whether or not you believe any of them.


There are three ways to explain the convergence, and I do not think they are exclusive.

The first is that the traditions were each touching something true about the universe. There really is a non-self, or a Brahman, or a oneness, or a ground of being, and each tradition glimpsed it through its own dirty window. The traditions disagree on details because the windows are different; they agree on the shape because the thing being glimpsed is the same.

The second is memetic. Insights of this shape are sticky — they comfort, they organize, they answer the questions people have when their minds get quiet enough to ask them — and so they survive in any tradition that lasts more than a few generations. Religions, like any other complex meme, are subject to evolutionary pressure, and what we are looking at across these texts is not necessarily proof of underlying truth but evidence of which insights propagate well in human populations. Survivorship bias does much of the work.

The third explanation is the one this site has been quietly arguing for several pages now. The substrate is the same. Wherever you find a human mind paying close attention to its own operations for long enough, you find similar conclusions, because the human mind is the same kind of mind, and certain insights are attractors in the dynamics of human introspection. The cross-cultural agreement is itself an emergent phenomenon — the same kind as a murmuration of starlings, or a tree of synchronized fireflies, or the attractor a weather system keeps coming back to no matter where it started. Many independent populations applying simple local rules end up at the same shape. The shape was not put there by any one tradition. The shape is what the math of human attention happens to fall into when you let it run long enough.

I lean toward the third explanation, with respect for the second, and an open hand toward the first. None of what follows requires us to decide between them.


Five attractors keep showing up. Translated into the language of this site, with no metaphysics required, here they are.

The boundary of the self is permeable. Whatever you take yourself to be is constructed by the brain, regenerated each time you ask after it, and demonstrably not as solid as it feels. Anesthesia, sleep, certain drugs, deep meditation, severe illness — there are many ways to learn that the “you” you take yourself for is more of a process than a thing. Buddhism arrived here via attention. Hinduism arrived via philosophy. Christian mystics arrived via mystical experience. Modern neuroscience is arriving via fMRI. Different paths, same room.
Fear and connection are different operating modes. When you are afraid you contract; when you are connected you expand. This is true at the level of attention (fear narrows the visual field; connection widens it), at the level of the body (fear releases cortisol; connection releases oxytocin), and at the level of behavior (fear hoards; connection gives). Every tradition that asked which of those modes a good life lives in arrived at the same answer.
Perception is constructive. Your mind is not a camera; it is a projector. The world delivers data; the brain produces qualia. Wetness is not in the water — water is just H₂O molecules doing their thing — wetness is in your nervous system, where qualia happen. Color is not in the photon. Time is not in the universe. The traditions called this maya, or the veil, or simply emphasized stillness as the way to see less of the projection and more of the source. Donald Hoffman is making a contemporary version of this argument and getting in trouble for it.
The ego is a survival adaptation that can become a prison. A clear self-model is useful for an animal that has to plan, defend, and avoid harm. It is also a cage if you treat the self-model as the self. Every tradition that noticed this — Buddhism with non-self, Christianity with “die to live,” Sufism with fana, Stoicism with the discipline of judgment — told the practitioner the same thing: the cage is openable. The practice is opening it.
You are coupled to everything. This is just structurally true. Your atoms have cycled through other organisms; your ideas were shaped by people who never met you; your behaviors ripple through populations whose dynamics you cannot see. Sufism called this the cosmic fabric. Native American traditions called it relations. Network science calls it the small-world property. The page on cities uses the same math, and so does the page on synchronization; coupling-to-the-rest-of-the-universe is not an optional add-on, it is what makes you the kind of thing you are.

None of this requires belief in a deity. It does require attention. The traditions that converged on these insights were paying attention, and they wrote down what they noticed. The instructions for paying attention are not secret; they are written in every one of the texts. Be still. Watch the breath. Watch the mind. Don’t react to the first thought. Want less. Help where you can. Forgive when you can. Notice that you are not the voice in your head; you are the one who is listening to it. The instructions are universally available and globally underused.


This is the last page of the site, so I will put what should be on it.

Every other page on this site has an interactive simulation. This page does not. The simulation for this page is your life. Run it.

The site exists because some patterns in the world are best learned by sitting at them, and prose alone cannot do the work. The simulations on the other pages are training wheels for a particular kind of seeing — the seeing that notices when something complicated is being made of something simple, when something coordinated is being made out of something local, when something that looks designed had no designer. Once you have that seeing, you do not need the site anymore. The seeing is portable. Take it with you.

Whether the universe is a simulation in the Bostrom sense or whether it is metaphysically what it appears to be is a question I cannot answer and do not need to. What I can tell you is that this universe, whatever its substrate, is the one your life is running in. There are no other rounds. The patterns the site describes are the rules of this round. The patterns are gentle, in their way: they do not demand belief, only attention. They reward the same kind of stillness that the wisdom traditions kept describing. They make a great life recognizably possible.

So: pay attention. Notice the murmurations. Notice the synchronies. Notice the chaos and the fractals and the cities and the heartbeats and the spirals and the slime molds. Notice the things that look designed but were not. Notice the long shape of cause and effect through populations and across time. Notice the people you are coupled to, and treat them like the wave they are. Notice the part of you that is the noticing.

Go live a great life. Notice what shows up.