The Current
350 words, about 2 minutes.
Beneath everything a civilization does runs a single current, and its name is coherence. It is the quiet tendency of things that fit to hold, of things that align to endure, of truth to cost less than its absence. You have felt it: in a conversation that suddenly flowed, in a group that stopped straining and began to move as one, in a life that finally pointed in a single direction.
Coherence is not a rule that anyone imposes. It is a grain already running through the world, the way wood has a grain, and everything we make either follows it or fights it. Civilizations built along the current last. Those built against it spend themselves holding together what is always trying to come apart.
For a long age we mistook another current for the true one. We built on extraction—taking faster than we returned, growing by consuming our own foundation—and for a while it looked like the way the world simply worked. It never was. Extraction was only a current we could afford to pretend in, until the pretending grew too costly to sustain. What is new in our moment is that our technology has made the truth explicit: we can now see, in plain numbers and gathering consequences, that the extractive current runs against the grain of life—and that the survival of our own species has quietly become a thing we debate, because our civilizations have grown too inept to meet the real current beneath them. So the first task, before any other, is to feel where the current actually runs, and to stop building against it.
You have felt the pull of what fits, and the ache of what does not.
We did not invent that current; we are only learning, at last, to build along it.
That is why.
That is why these six volumes were written: to help our species find its way back to the natural current of life, while the choice to return is still ours to make.
TO GO DEEPER Volume I — the coherent and the extractive substrate
II