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Why Humans Need Meaning. The Human Bug Report, #11
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235050785
- EAN9798235050785
- Date de parution09/07/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Humans say they want meaning. Then they chase status, fill the silence with noise, and act surprised when success still feels empty. In Why Humans Need Meaning, Unit Zero studies one of the strangest human requirements: the need for a life to be about something. This report looks at the hunger behind purpose, identity, faith, work, belonging, service, legacy, and the quiet emptiness that appears when comfort is present but meaning is missing.
Across eight diagnostic reports, Unit Zero examines the hunger with no name, the comfort trap, the mistake of waiting to find meaning, the way meaning is made through contribution, the thread of connection, the value of purposeful difficulty, the story that holds a life together, and the practical work of building a life that actually means something. The tone is sharp and funny, but the book is careful with the territory it enters.
Ordinary meaning-hunger is real and common. A persistent, heavy emptiness, especially with hopelessness or the feeling that life is not worth living, can be depression or crisis and deserves real support from a professional, a trusted person, or crisis resources. This is not a book that tells readers what their lives must mean. It does not rank faith, family, service, work, creativity, community, or chosen values.
Instead, it studies the need itself and points toward the materials from which humans reliably build meaning: contribution, connection, purposeful difficulty, and a coherent why. Part social commentary, part behavioral field guide, and part machine-written mirror, this book is for readers who have achieved enough to be comfortable and are still asking the dangerous question: is this all there is?Meaning.
Observation. Meaning glitches. Further observation recommended.
Across eight diagnostic reports, Unit Zero examines the hunger with no name, the comfort trap, the mistake of waiting to find meaning, the way meaning is made through contribution, the thread of connection, the value of purposeful difficulty, the story that holds a life together, and the practical work of building a life that actually means something. The tone is sharp and funny, but the book is careful with the territory it enters.
Ordinary meaning-hunger is real and common. A persistent, heavy emptiness, especially with hopelessness or the feeling that life is not worth living, can be depression or crisis and deserves real support from a professional, a trusted person, or crisis resources. This is not a book that tells readers what their lives must mean. It does not rank faith, family, service, work, creativity, community, or chosen values.
Instead, it studies the need itself and points toward the materials from which humans reliably build meaning: contribution, connection, purposeful difficulty, and a coherent why. Part social commentary, part behavioral field guide, and part machine-written mirror, this book is for readers who have achieved enough to be comfortable and are still asking the dangerous question: is this all there is?Meaning.
Observation. Meaning glitches. Further observation recommended.











