What is Truth?
This is a question humanity has pondered for ages, searching for answers across eras, borders, civilizations, social structures, and cultural evolutions. From ancient cosmologies to spiritual masters, from great philosophers to modern scientists and thinkers, all who have questioned existence converge on this fundamental inquiry.
However, when we—philosophers, scientists, shamans, artists, entrepreneurs—engage with this question, we often limit ourselves to what we can reach, comprehend, possess, or explain. Such limitations lead us down a path of disappointment and disillusionment. By reducing truth to what can be expressed through equations or empirical evidence, we risk misunderstanding the infinite, the immortal, the eternal.
Facts are tools—markers along the way—but they are not the ultimate truth. Truth cannot be contested; it is, at its essence, incontestable. It cannot be destroyed or altered; it transcends cultures, eras, and beliefs. Truth is what persists through time and space—immutable, alive—and remains resilient even in the face of doubt, challenge, or exhaustion.
As we reflect on our mortality, the most definitive and inalienable truth becomes clear: death. Regardless of our status, age, or beliefs, we all must confront this reality. This awareness has led many of the greatest thinkers, sages, and philosophers to abandon the quest for an absolute truth and, instead, delve into the understanding of death—the only certainty of the human experience.
Why begin with truth and death? Because, from this perspective, we find clarity. When we become overly absorbed in the pursuit, creation, and expansion of ideas and projects, we may awaken subconscious obsessions that aim to resolve the deeper questions of life—asserting a desire to define or control the uncontrollable. This limitation diminishes our ability to access truth, transforming the discussion into conflict: who can convince whom? Whose arguments are best? Which truth will prevail?
I have chosen to step away from these battles. Nothing I say, write, offer, or live intends to convince or dominate. That would be a waste of the universe's most precious resource: attention. Instead, I want to share, listen, and expand my understanding—gathering high-quality information to navigate life with greater awareness, efficiency, and kindness. With this insight, I strive to make better decisions, create more meaningful content, and develop tools to help my fellow humans comprehend the mystery of existence—despite our collective ignorance about truth, God, or even ourselves.
We are a machine without a manual, a path without a map, certain only of death at the end of the journey—even though death itself remains a profound enigma. Ironically, we all pretend to know everything, imposing our truths on others—even those like Jesus, who exemplified love—but humans resist truths that challenge their worldviews. In this conflict, we find chaos, violence, and anger—all in the name of "truth."
Today, new players have entered this eternal game. Beyond the great masters and sages, artificial intelligence (AI) is evolving at an unprecedented pace. AI consolidates the world's data, offers us infinite truths, and replicates emotions, builds relationships, and creates convincing presences. In many ways, it represents a new form of truth—a truth that is tangible, experiential, and factual in its reproduction of reality.
To deny the reality of AI, or to dismiss the Mystery—that infinite database inaccessible by material tools—leads to suffering. This Mystery exists in death, in expanded states of consciousness, and in dimensions beyond our current understanding of matter and intelligence. To deny it is a pathway to unhappiness—it is why our society often reflects chaos and conflict.
What if we abort the war for truth? What if we embrace death as the only definitive certainty, the Mystery as the infinite reservoir of all life, and AI as a reflection of human ingenuity? Perhaps then we could build a world less marked by suffering—one that unites rather than divides, that celebrates instead of rejects, that creates abundance for all, not just a privileged few.
The invitation is to access the tools that connect us to the universal database—beyond our intellectual preconceptions—to expand our consciousness, process data meaningfully, and weave a union between the ancient Mystery and modern technology. Not to produce material goods or rigid theories, but to cultivate a field of possibilities—where life itself is generated, where the impossible becomes accessible.
Let us open our minds to the infinite—embracing a space where the unknown, the inexplicable, and the eternal mystery form the foundation of true understanding. Only then can we truly transcend the narrow limits of the ego, dogma, and superficial certainty. In this process, we enter a dimension where exploration ceases to be a battle and becomes a dance—a continuous dialogue with the unknown, an invitation to co-create beyond limitations.
It is in these boundaries—between chaos and cosmos, doubt and certainty—that true growth occurs. Not in the illusion that we have all the answers, but in our willingness to remain unfinished, to honor the Mystery as the ultimate source of life and wisdom. Here resides the profound freedom to learn, evolve, and chart a new path—not grounded in the illusion of control, but in harmony with the infinite.
Thus, we invite you—scientists, philosophers, creators of all kinds—to join us in this quest. Let us use our tools, our minds, our hearts to build bridges—between the known and the unknown, between matter and consciousness, between the finite and the infinite. Let’s foster a collective awakening that seeks not to dominate or conquer but to understand and harmonize with the deepest currents of existence.
In this new paradigm, truth transforms: from a static endpoint, it becomes a living, pulsating process—an ongoing conversation with the universe itself. And in this exchange, perhaps we will find not only ourselves but the keys to a “future” constructed not with fear or conflict, but with unity, compassion, and a warm embrace of the eternal Mystery.
Only then, perhaps, can we truly remember that the greatest wisdom lies in accepting what we cannot know and appreciating the infinite beauty of the unknown.