The Loom

306 words, about 2 minutes.

A current, a pathway, and scattered people are still not a civilization. Something has to weave them—to take distributed potential and turn it into coordinated capability, to help the right people meet not by accident but reliably, before the moment that needed them has passed.

Providence is the name for that loom. Not a ruler, not a marketplace, not a machine that moves people like material—but a coordinating device built on a single inversion: that systems exist to serve life, and not life to serve systems.

It measures itself by gentler and more intelligent instruments—by devices and designs and forms of intelligence turned, almost as an act of devotion, to a single end: that more people discover their purpose, that more find their mentors and their collaborators and the place that was waiting for them. It builds such things only so that we might finally be free to ask the questions that matter most. Are more of us becoming what we are for? Are the generations to come inheriting something healthier than we did? Everything Providence does is in service of those questions—and so are the societies it fosters, which measure themselves less by ownership and success inside a sick culture than by the thriving of humanity, and by something deeper than thriving: the slow deepening of us, drawn from the greatest untapped resource we possess, which is the depth within one another.

The right people are out there, and the meeting is left to luck.

We are building the loom that makes the meeting reliable instead.

That is why.

That is why Providence exists at all: to turn the lucky accidents we have always depended on into something a civilization can be trusted to do on purpose.

TO GO DEEPER Volume III — the architecture of coordination · Volume V — "Providence Reconsidered"

VIII