Saturday, July 18, 2026

MY CONTRIBUTION

My Contribution

As I have grown older, I have become less interested in accumulating possessions or accomplishments and more interested in leaving behind ideas. If I have any legacy to offer, it is not wealth or fame but a way of thinking about the human condition.

We are the products of billions of years of cosmic and biological evolution. The universe is unimaginably vast, and our individual lives are astonishingly brief. Before we were born, we did not exist. After we die, we will again return to nonexistence. Against the backdrop of cosmic time, the fact that any of us exists at all is extraordinary.

That realization has shaped my philosophy.

I see no convincing evidence for a supernatural realm or a personal God directing human affairs. The universe appears to operate according to natural laws that science gradually uncovers, even if our understanding remains incomplete. For me, that means we are responsible for making sense of our own existence. We cannot depend on divine intervention to solve our problems or dictate our morality.

Far from making life meaningless, this places meaning squarely in our own hands. We create meaning through our relationships, our curiosity, our compassion, our work, and our willingness to leave the world a little better than we found it.

One of my lifelong concerns has been morality. Too often, societies proclaim moral principles while failing to live by them. I have become convinced that humanity needs a universal moral framework rooted not in religious doctrine but in our shared humanity. Such a framework should emphasize empathy, honesty, fairness, personal responsibility, respect for evidence, and, above all, a commitment to minimizing unnecessary harm.

Whether people are religious or not, none of us is exempt from the obligation to treat others with dignity. Moral conduct should be measured by its effects on human well-being, not merely by declarations of belief or membership in a particular faith.

I have also come to believe that many of our social institutions deserve closer examination. Marriage, for example, has provided stability, companionship, and family for countless people. Yet it is also an institution that can struggle under the weight of changing expectations, individual differences, and the realities of human nature. Rather than accepting inherited assumptions without question, we should be willing to ask whether our institutions continue to serve the purposes for which they were created.

Above all, I believe that the examined life is the only life worth living. We should question our beliefs, test our assumptions, follow evidence wherever it leads, and remain willing to change our minds when better evidence appears.

I do not claim to possess final answers. I have spent a lifetime searching, reading, observing, and thinking, and I suspect the search itself is more important than any particular conclusion. The pursuit of truth, imperfect though it may be, is among humanity's noblest endeavors.

If I have one message to leave behind, it is this: think for yourself. Be skeptical of certainty, whether it comes from politicians, philosophers, scientists, or religious leaders. Cherish reason, value evidence, practice empathy, and never stop asking questions.

We did not choose to be here. But while we are here, we have the opportunity, and the responsibility, to contribute to help one another navigate this brief and remarkable existence.

If that is my contribution, it is enough.

William James Spriggs

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