Would you care if someone gave it to you and didn't like the meaning? If God almighty descended from the heavens and told you the purpose of existence was to eventually create his favorite Vtuber or hyperparasitic wasp, would you devote your life to it?
"The problem, often not discovered until late in life, is that when you look for things like love, meaning, motivation, it implies they are sitting behind a tree or under a rock. The most successful people recognize, that in life they create their own love, they manufacture their own meaning, they generate their own motivation."
It's by Neil deGrasse Tyson but probably still worth thinking about.
We’re here because molecules that make the most effectively self-reproducing near-copies of themselves are most likely to continue to exist. The purpose of a human life is to perpetuate some of those molecules.
There is no meaning to life — just laws of physics and “laws” of natural selection that together cause it. But I suppose you’re welcome to make up something if it’s important to you.
My own take is that there are three levels to meaning:
Genetic legacy, societal legacy, and simple vibing.
Most anyone who has had children that have outlived them have satisfied the genetic legacy. Yes, that dilutes very rapidly, but it’s there.
Societal/civilizational legacy is where you are remembered by many after you have died. Thomas Edison and Nikolai Tesla achieved civilizational legacy. So did Cleopatra and Alexander and Genghis Kahn. Rush Limbaugh? Not so much. He failed at leaving a legacy.
The final level is vibing. Finding yourself, understanding yourself, finding peace within yourself, and being one with the universe. Enjoying every day that comes along. Finding satisfaction in everything you do.
Objectively the question is unanswerable and hence meaningless. That is just a neutral fact.
However, We experience "Objective Reality" through our Subjective Senses and infer/deduce more in our "Mind" from experiences/memories/recorded knowledge/etc. using various methodologies/tools.
Based on the above, we build "Worldviews" expressed as "Philosophies" and practiced as "Religions". It is in this domain that your questions make sense and answers can be given. A materialistic/utilitarian philosophy will give you a different answer from an idealistic one.
Note that though objective reality exists (since it is common to others besides oneself) it is through our observations/perceptions/deductions of it through our senses (and extensions of it via technology) that the mind defines/accepts a worldview model. A good way to think about it is as a blank canvas (i.e. nihilism) on which you paint your chosen philosophies.
It is for this reason that ancient Hindu/Buddhist/Greek/etc. philosophies placed "The Mind" at the center of existence and framed "Reality as an Illusion" i.e. your perceived/deduced reality actually exists on a more fundamental substrate. An example often used is that of waves on water where water is the reality and waves are the illusion since they come and go.
Hindu/Buddhist philosophies go further by disambiguating "The Mind" (the field in which emotions/feelings/experiences/thoughts/memories operate) from "Consciousness" (pure awareness which witnesses the above). Based on these theories they define a "universal framework" (viz. goals, stages and duty in life) for all of mankind. Here is a previous comment of mine explaining it - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48325659
2) In Hinduism, the different philosophical schools are called "Darsanas" which literally means a mode of seeing reality i.e. a worldview. There are six major schools and lots of minor ones. A good introduction can be found in An Introduction to Indian Philosophy by Satischandra Chatterjee and Dhirendramohan Datta. Pdf at - https://archive.org/download/IntroductionToIndianPhilosophy/...
To get that perspective from within one needs to give in to nature. Simply sit on a bench in a park for an hour. Do not talk to anyone, do not listen or watch anything. Just sit there. Outdoor.
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