The Universe as Narcissus: On the Collapse of Moral Responsibility
The Universe as Narcissus: On the Collapse of Moral Responsibility There is a particular kind of spiritual language that has become common in our age, and it sounds like this: The universe has my back. The universe brought us together. The universe will provide. It is spoken with the confidence of revelation, yet it carries a strange emptiness beneath its words. For when we press upon it, when we ask what exactly is meant by "the universe," the answer dissolves into vagueness. It is not a god with character and will. It is not a law with structure and consequence. It is something else—a cosmic blur, a spiritual placeholder, an abstraction dressed in the language of authority without any of its substance. This is not merely a semantic quirk. It is a philosophical problem with real moral weight, one that theology and philosophy have grappled with for centuries. The instinct to distrust such language is not irrational. It is, in fact, the recognition of a deep incohe...
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