Holocosmism
Holocosmism is a philosophical and ontological view that treats the Cosmos as a fully interconnected totality. It does not require supernatural intervention or an external purpose in order to be meaningful.
At its center is a simple but demanding idea: wonder is not an escape from reason, but a rigorous form of attention. Science explains how things work; wonder preserves the lived meaning of encountering them.
Holocosmism rejects both the reduction of experience to mere mechanism and its capture by mysticism or dogma. It asks for intellectual honesty, patience with uncertainty, and respect for what exceeds immediate explanation.
Core ideas
- The Cosmos is everything that exists.
- There is no outside and no external designer.
- Meaning emerges from relations, not from imposed purpose.
- Human beings are temporary configurations within a larger network.
- Wonder is a disciplined cognitive stance, not irrationality.