Thursday, March 19, 2026

FAITH

Faith and the Abandonment of Inquiry

Humanity has come a long way.

Across millennia, we have clawed our way out of ignorance not by revelation, not by divine whisper, but by a method. A discipline. A refusal to accept appearances without examination. We learned to ask: What is the evidence? Where is it? What does it mean? And from those questions emerged the greatest achievement of our species, the scientific method.

It is this method, and this method alone, that has allowed us to understand the stars, decode the genome, cure disease, and extend life. It has revealed the age of the universe, the structure of matter, and the origins of our own species. It has replaced superstition with knowledge, myth with measurable fact.

Before this awakening, we lived in darkness. What we could not explain, we named “God.” Thunder was divine anger. Disease was punishment. The unknown was filled not with inquiry, but with imagination. Faith, in that age, was not merely common; it was inevitable. We did not know better.

But we do now.

And that changes everything.

The tragedy of our time is not that we once relied on faith, but that we still do.

Faith, as it is commonly used, is not a virtue. It is the suspension of inquiry. It is belief without evidence, and worse, belief in spite of evidence. It is the decision, sometimes conscious, often not, to stop thinking at the very moment thinking is most required.

We have evolved the cognitive tools necessary to examine reality, yet we frequently refuse to use them. Instead, we retreat into faith as an intellectual refuge. When answers are difficult, when evidence is complex, when conclusions are uncomfortable, faith offers an escape: Do not question. Do not examine. Simply believe.

This is not harmless.

Faith becomes a justification for ignorance. It becomes a shield against correction. It allows individuals and entire societies to cling to falsehoods long after they have been disproven. It rewards certainty over curiosity, dogma over discovery, comfort over truth.

In this sense, faith is not merely passive; it is corrosive.

History bears this out. Wars have been fought, progress delayed, and lives destroyed in the name of beliefs held without evidence. Even today, faith is used to deny scientific realities, to resist medical advancements, and to perpetuate divisions among people who share far more in common than they are willing to admit.

But perhaps the most insidious effect of faith is quieter.

It diminishes the human mind.

To accept something on faith is to abandon the most powerful capacity we possess, the ability to reason. It is to say, in effect, that truth is less important than comfort. That understanding is optional. That the search for reality can be replaced by the acceptance of assertion.

This is a profound betrayal of what it means to be human.

We are not a species defined by what we believe. We are a species defined by how we find out.

The arc of human progress is the story of inquiry overcoming assumption. Of evidence replacing speculation. Of doubt, honest, disciplined doubt leading us closer to what is real.

Faith interrupts that arc.

It asks us to stop where we should continue.
To accept where we should question.
To believe where we should investigate.

If we are to honor the journey that brought us here from ignorance to understanding, from myth to knowledge, then we must be willing to confront an uncomfortable truth:

Faith, as belief without evidence, has no rightful place in the pursuit of reality.

This does not mean abandoning wonder. Quite the opposite. The universe, as revealed through evidence and reason, is far more extraordinary than anything imagined through unexamined belief. The proper response to the unknown is not faith, it is curiosity.

Not certainty but investigation.

We do not need faith to face the mysteries of existence.
We need courage.

Courage to admit what we do not know.
Courage to seek evidence.
Courage to change our minds when the facts demand it.

That is the true inheritance of our species.

And it is enough.

William  James Spriggs

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

QUIET SEEING

The High Life of Quiet Seeing

There comes a time, unannounced,
No trumpet, no decree.
When the world does not grow louder,
But infinitely more precise.

The wind is no longer “the wind,”
But a hand upon the cheek,
Cooler now than moments past,
Carrying stories from unseen miles.

A tree is no longer “a tree,”
But a companion of shared design.
Its veins not unlike our own.
Its patience far superior.

Grass becomes a congregation.
Each blade rising with quiet purpose,
Whispering of sunlight and soil,
Of the ancient agreement to live.

And we.
Late arrivals to understanding.
Finally see.
What was always there.

Time loosens its grip.

Hours dissolve into moments,
Moments into awareness,
Awareness into something,
That does not need a clock.

You move, perhaps.
But cannot say when,
Or why,
Or even if movement occurred at all.

You have become
Less an actor,
More a witness.

Participation.
A rare and deliberate act.
Reserved for when the soul insists:
“Yes, this matters.”

And so mostly,
You observe.

Not with detachment,
But with completion.

Anger finds no foothold here.
Urgency has lost its voice.
Even desire speaks more softly,
As if aware it is no longer in charge.

This is not emptiness.

This is arrival.

A life distilled.
Where nothing need be proven,
Nothing accumulated,
Nothing defended.

Only noticed.

Only understood.

Only.
Quietly shared.

And in this gentle awareness,
This unmeasured drifting between moments,
There comes the final, unexpected gift:

Peace.
Not as something achieved,
But as something received.

WJS

 

Sunday, March 15, 2026

WHAT IS REAL?

The Search for What Is Real

Most people believe the purpose of life is happiness, success, wealth, or love.
But these are only side effects of something deeper.

The real purpose of a life well lived is the search for what is real.

From the moment we become conscious, we begin asking questions, whether we know it or not.
Where are we?
Who are we?
What is this strange moment between birth and death?
What is real, and what is illusion?

Human history is the long record of that search.

Philosophy asked the first questions.
Logic refined them.
Science gave us the most reliable tool we have ever developed: the scientific method — a disciplined way of separating fact from wish, reality from belief.

Yet the search remains difficult.

Today we live in a time flooded with false claims, false narratives, and invented realities. Noise surrounds us. Opinion masquerades as truth. Emotion often overwhelms reason. The work of discovering reality has never been more important — or more challenging.

But the tools are there.
Logic still works.
Evidence still matters.
Truth still exists.

If we devote ourselves honestly to the search, we can find pieces of it.

And once we discover even fragments of reality, something remarkable happens:
we can make peace with this brief existence.

Because understanding reality allows us to live without illusion.
It allows us to know where we stand in the universe, even if only for a moment.

That has been the purpose of my own work — to record what I have discovered to be real, stripped of decoration, free of ideology, and untouched by wishful thinking.

Not to persuade.
Not to preach.
Only to observe and to record.

In the end, perhaps the greatest compliment one person can give another is simple:

“You are real.”

We know what that means.
It means you see clearly.
You speak honestly.
You stand on the ground of reality.

And in a world often filled with illusion, there is no higher praise.

Friday, February 27, 2026

DEMOCRACY IS DANGEROUS

Socrates Was Right: Democracy Is a Dangerous Pathway

When we speak reverently of democracy, we rarely pause to examine its fragility. We treat it as a moral achievement rather than a volatile instrument. Yet more than two thousand years ago, Socrates warned that democracy, while preferable to tyranny, carries within it the seeds of its own destruction.

He had reason to worry. Democratic Athens sentenced him to death.

Socrates observed that democracy rests upon freedom—freedom of speech, freedom of choice, freedom of ambition. But when freedom is untethered from wisdom and discipline, it can become chaos. When citizens prize desire over reason, popularity over truth, and passion over prudence, democracy becomes unstable. It begins to devour itself.

His argument was not that democracy is evil. It was that democracy is dangerous.

In a democracy, leaders are selected by persuasion, not by proven virtue. The skilled orator can triumph over the thoughtful statesman. The crowd can be stirred by fear, resentment, or fantasy. And once a majority is inflamed, it can legitimize decisions that undermine its own long-term survival. The same mechanism that empowers the people can also empower demagogues.

History has shown this repeatedly. Democracies rarely collapse because of foreign invasion alone. They collapse because internal factions erode norms, institutions weaken, and citizens lose trust in shared facts. The ballot becomes an instrument of grievance rather than judgment. The public square fills with noise rather than reason.

This is why democracy must be carefully circumscribed.

By “circumscribed,” we do not mean suppressed. We mean structured. Bounded. Anchored by institutions that cannot be overturned by a single election cycle. Protected by constitutions that restrain both rulers and the ruled. Sustained by an educated citizenry capable of critical thought.

Democracy without guardrails is mob rule. Democracy without moral discipline becomes a competition of appetites. Democracy without respect for truth deteriorates into theater.

Socrates understood that the greatest threat to democracy was not external enemies but internal indulgence. When citizens demand immediate gratification rather than long-term stability, they invite instability. When they elevate charisma over character, they gamble with their own security.

And yet, despite its dangers, democracy remains the least destructive pathway available to free societies—provided it is guided by law, tempered by restraint, and animated by an ethic of responsibility.

The paradox is this: democracy requires self-limitation. The people must choose not to do everything they have the power to do. They must accept institutional boundaries even when those boundaries frustrate them. They must tolerate dissent without seeking to silence it. They must value facts over narratives.

Democracy survives not because it is perfect, but because enough citizens understand its vulnerabilities.

Socrates paid with his life for speaking inconvenient truths about the instability of popular rule. But his warning endures: unchecked democracy can slide toward tyranny just as surely as monarchy can. The difference lies not in the form of government alone, but in the character and discipline of its people.

Democracy is not self-executing. It is a dangerous instrument—powerful, unpredictable, and dependent on the wisdom of those who wield it.

If we forget that, we prove Socrates right in the worst possible way.Top of Form

William James Spriggs

 

Bottom of Form

 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

I HAVE SEEN THE ARC

I Have Seen the Arc

There is a peculiar vantage point granted to a long life.

I have seen the golden age of technology,  from rotary phones to handheld supercomputers. I have seen the decoding of DNA and the mapping of the cosmos. I have watched astrophysics turn speculation into measurable fact. I have seen men walk on the moon and telescopes peer into the infancy of the universe.

I have seen the American middle class rise like a tide and then recede.

I have seen democracy flourish with confidence, stumble in arrogance, and now strain under division. I have seen economic booms, oil shocks, financial collapses, recoveries, and excess. I have seen leaders who steadied the ship and leaders who shook it.

I have seen the best of this country,  and I have seen its unraveling.

From this vantage point, one is tempted to say: I have seen enough.

When you have witnessed ascent and decline, progress and regression, expansion and contraction, the temptation is to conclude that the arc has peaked. That the best has been spent. That's what remains is entropy.

And now we stand at the threshold of artificial intelligence,  a force that may amplify human brilliance or magnify human folly. It could cure a disease. It could consolidate power. It could liberate or destabilize. It may reshape labor, identity, and even survival.

To someone who has watched decades unfold, this feels like a final chapter,  perhaps not of one life, but of a civilization’s phase.

There is a quiet thought that follows:

If I have seen the summit, why linger for the descent?

Yet that thought contains an error.

History does not move in straight lines. It convulses. It regresses. It surprises. What appears to be a collapse may be a transition. What feels like finality may be reformation.

The long view can breed fatigue — but it can also grant clarity.

Perhaps the role of age is not to flee decline, but to name it honestly. To document it. To warn. To analyze. To testify.

If I have seen the golden age, then I am also a witness to it.

And witnesses are not ornamental. They are necessary.

The country may fail. It may recover. It may transform into something unrecognizable. Artificial intelligence may save us or diminish us.

But until the last page is actually written, none of us truly knows the ending.

And perhaps that uncertainty, irritating, unsettling, is itself the reason to remain.

Not for hope.

For observation.

For the record.

For truth.

WJS

Sunday, February 8, 2026

NIHLISM

Nihilism as a Philosophy of Endurance, Not Hope

Nihilism is often misunderstood as a call to despair or destruction. It is neither. At its core, nihilism is a philosophy of recognition, recognition that we did not exist before birth, did not consent to existence, and will not exist after death. Whatever meaning we experience in between is contingent, temporary, and often imposed upon us without invitation.

This observation is not radical. It is precise.

Human existence begins without our asking and ends without our approval. Between those two states, many lives include suffering, illness, loss, coercion, and experiences that damage the psyche and the body. To acknowledge this is not pessimism for its own sake; it is intellectual honesty.

Nihilism does not promise that life is good.
It does not promise that suffering is redeemed.
It does not promise that things “work out.”

That is not its failure. That is its clarity.

Crucially, nihilism is not a philosophy of action. It does not command behavior. It does not instruct destruction. It does not justify violence. Any movement that turns existential recognition into the killing of others has abandoned philosophy entirely and entered moral collapse. The murder of others in the name of nihilism is not an expression of the philosophy; it is a betrayal of it.

What nihilism offers instead is something quieter and more difficult: endurance without illusion.

This is not hope. Hope implies expectation, an anticipation that circumstances will improve or that suffering will be redeemed by some future state. Nihilism makes no such claim. It does not ask us to believe things will get better. It asks only that we see things as they are.

Endurance, in this sense, is not heroism. It is not optimism. It is simply the refusal to lie to oneself about the nature of existence while continuing to inhabit it.

To endure nihilistically is to say:

  • I recognize that life has no guaranteed meaning.
  • I recognize that my presence here was not planned or requested.
  • I recognize that suffering is real and often unjustified.
  • And yet, I do not convert this recognition into harm.

Endurance is restraint.
Endurance is lucidity without collapse.
Endurance is living without metaphysical anesthesia.

This is why nihilism must be separated from violence. Violence is an assertion of false power over others. Nihilism, properly understood, strips away illusions of power rather than inflating them. It leaves no moral ground for domination, revenge, or destruction.

A philosophy of endurance does not celebrate existence, nor does it rush to extinguish it. It simply acknowledges the human condition and refuses to compound suffering by spreading it.

In a time when despair is being weaponized and nihilism distorted into justification for cruelty, this distinction matters. Nihilism is not a license to kill. It is a discipline of seeing clearly and enduring what is seen without turning that clarity into catastrophe.

William James Spriggs

Sunday, January 18, 2026

CURSE

The Curse of Knowing

We are the only creatures
who know the shape of nothing.
Not by touch,
not by sight,
but by the mind’s cruel gift
of looking beyond itself.

Before the first breath,
there was no waiting room of souls,
no quiet hallway of light.
There was not even darkness.
There was no “there” at all.
And one day, there will not be again.

The trees do not carry this burden.
The tide does not rehearse its ending.
The sparrow does not wake at dawn
and calculate the odds against existence.
They live inside the moment
as if it were the whole universe
because, to them, it is.

But we stand in time
with one eye on the cradle
and the other on the grave,
condemned to measure every joy
against the knowledge
that it vanishes absolutely.

We love while knowing
love will be erased.
We build while knowing
the hands that build will rot.
We speak while knowing
the last word is silence
so complete it erases the speaker.

This is our curse:
not that we die,
but that we know we will.
Not that we came from nothing,
but that we can imagine it
and call it by name.

And yet, inside this sentence of awareness,
something defiant still rises.
We laugh, though laughter proves nothing.
We write, though the page will not survive us.
We reach for one another
across the thin instant called “now,”
as if to say to the void:

You may have before us.
You may have after us.
But you do not have this moment
while we are in it.

And in that brief rebellion of consciousness,
that flicker between two eternities,
we carve meaning out of nothing
and call it
a life.

WJS