DAY 1

Philosophy Classics: The Question of Being

May 19, 2026 · Tuesday
Is the world we perceive real, or only its shadow?
The question of being is philosophy's first doorway. East and West, in different idioms, have pressed the same inquiry: what is real, and how can we know that we exist? Plato leads us out of the cave; Zhuangzi has us doubt the dream; Descartes finds the self by way of doubt itself; and Buddhism tells us that what we call "I" is only the momentary gathering of five aggregates. Today's four passages, spanning more than two millennia, offer a polyphonic response to the question of existence.
Plato Western · Ancient Greek Philosophy
Republic, Book VII · c. 380 BCE
Source / Core Claim
"What we see is only shadow cast on the wall of a cave. The true real is the world of Forms, lit by the sun."
Exposition

Plato imagines prisoners chained inside a cave, their gaze fixed forever on a wall where firelight throws flickering shadows — and they take these shadows for all there is. One who breaks free and climbs out sees the sun itself: the Form of the Good. Returning to tell the others, he is mocked, even threatened. Plato uses the image to divide two domains: the visible world of phenomena, restless and shifting, and the intelligible world of Forms, eternal and real. The philosopher's task is to turn — to wrench attention away from the senses and toward the light of the Forms.

Cross-Disciplinary Resonance

Contemporary neuroscience suggests perception is itself a constructed model — predictive coding the brain runs against the world — strikingly like shadows projected on a wall. Large language models inhabit a similar predicament: they infer from token-shadows of a world they never leave. In complexity science, the Form can be read as an attractor: surface patterns shift endlessly, yet the underlying structure remains.

Contemporary Application
Everyday: The "facts" served by news feeds, social platforms, and recommendation algorithms are pre-edited shadows. Returning to primary data and original sources is the first step out of the cave.
BigCat: For anyone pursuing the "AI-augmented individual," beware of treating model output as truth. Ask the model for three competing hypotheses rather than trusting the first answer — a first-principles way to translate the cave wall into multiple projections.
In Brief
Plato's Allegory of the Cave argues that ordinary perception only shows shadows of reality. True knowledge requires turning toward the eternal Forms — an ascent that demands intellectual courage and often alienates the seeker from those content with appearances.
Question to Sit With
In an age governed by AI and algorithmic feeds, how much of today's incoming "information" is sunlight, and how much is shadow on the wall?
Zhuangzi 庄子 Eastern · Daoism
Zhuangzi, "Discussion on Making All Things Equal" (Qiwulun) · c. 4th century BCE
Source / Core Claim
昔者庄周梦为胡蝶,栩栩然胡蝶也……不知周之梦为胡蝶与,胡蝶之梦为周与? Translation: Once Zhuang Zhou dreamt he was a butterfly, fluttering happily as a butterfly. He did not know he was Zhou. Suddenly he woke and found himself, unmistakably, Zhou. But he could not tell: was Zhou dreaming he was a butterfly, or was a butterfly dreaming it was Zhou?
Exposition

Zhuangzi dreams himself a butterfly, drifting in delight, and on waking cannot tell which side of the dream is real. This is not sophistry but a radical dissolution of the subject–object divide. Zhuangzi is not searching for a single true reality; he is pointing to wu hua (物化, the transformation of things) — the ceaseless interflow between forms. The "I" is only a temporary configuration in the great current of change. Once this is seen, there is no need to pin down "which one is really me"; one can move freely (xiaoyao you, 逍遥游) among forms.

Cross-Disciplinary Resonance

Quantum mechanics' observer effect and superposition echo the butterfly dream: before measurement, the state is not fixed. Consciousness research reports the same: the felt boundary of self is something the neural network actively constructs, not a stable substance. In distributed systems, a node's identity depends on context — the same logic as Zhuangzi's wu hua.

Contemporary Application
Everyday: In an era of chronic identity anxiety, remember that the "I" is fluid; no single moment's role need become a final definition.
BigCat: Mother, investor, manager, AI collaborator — don't try to lock the "real self" inside any one label. Allow the transformation between roles, and you may become freer and more precise in each.
In Brief
Zhuangzi's Butterfly Dream questions the boundary between self and world. Rather than seeking which state is "real," Zhuangzi celebrates the transformation between them — suggesting that identity is fluid, and freedom lies in accepting metamorphosis rather than fixing the self.
Question to Sit With
If both "Zhuang Zhou" and "the butterfly" are real, then among all the roles you played today, which one is "you" — or is it that they are, together, you?
Descartes Western · Early-Modern Rationalism
Meditations on First Philosophy · 1641
Source / Core Claim
Cogito, ergo sum. Translation: I think, therefore I am.
Exposition

In search of an unshakable foundation for knowledge, Descartes resolves to doubt everything: the senses can deceive, dreams resemble waking life, and perhaps a malicious demon manipulates his every thought. Yet he notices that doubt itself requires a doubter — the very act of doubting cannot itself be doubted away. From this he extracts his first principle: as long as I am thinking, "I" must exist. This move opens modern philosophy's "turn to the subject," shifting the bedrock of philosophy from the external world to the interior of consciousness.

Cross-Disciplinary Resonance

This is the seed of Chalmers' Hard Problem of consciousness: does the existence of a thinker entail the existence of subjective experience? When a GPT-style model says "I am thinking," does it thereby exist? Neuroscience holds that the sense of self is an emergent construction; Descartes' insight is that whether or not the self is illusion, the very experiencing of the illusion already constitutes a kind of being. This is the true watershed in disputes between AI and human consciousness.

Contemporary Application
Everyday: Under information overload and the judgments of others, return to the minimal certainty of "I am thinking" and rebuild your fulcrum of judgment from there.
BigCat: In investing, apply methodological doubt — submit each premise to the "demon test": if someone were deliberately misleading me, would this datum still stand? What survives is the cognition worth betting on.
In Brief
Descartes' radical doubt sought one indubitable truth. He found it in the act of thinking itself: even if all else is illusion, the thinker must exist to be deceived. "I think, therefore I am" became the cornerstone of modern philosophy and the modern self.
Question to Sit With
If an AI says "I am thinking," does it also "exist"? What is the basis of your judgment — its output, or its experience?
Buddhism · The Five Aggregates Eastern · Buddhist Philosophy
Heart Sūtra; Saṃyukta Āgama · c. 5th century BCE – 4th century CE
Source / Core Claim
观自在菩萨,行深般若波罗蜜多时,照见五蕴皆空,度一切苦厄。 Translation: When the Bodhisattva Avalokiteśvara was practicing the deep prajñāpāramitā, he illuminated the emptiness of the five aggregates and crossed beyond all suffering.
Exposition

Buddhism holds that what we call "I" is composed of five aggregates (skandhas): rūpa (form, the body and material), vedanā (sensation), saṃjñā (perception), saṃskāra (volitional formations, habit-energies), and vijñāna (consciousness). These are not a fixed self but a stream of conditioned arising and ceasing. Emptiness (śūnyatā, 空) does not mean "nothing"; it means "no inherent essence" — nothing exists in independence of its conditions. To see the five aggregates as empty is not nihilism but liberation from clinging to a fictitious "self," and therefore the crossing beyond suffering.

Cross-Disciplinary Resonance

Modern neuroscience converges from another direction: the sense of self emerges from the coordinated activity of multiple networks (the Default Mode Network, cortical midline structures, and others); there is no anatomical "I." Complexity science teaches that many systems are emergent rather than substantial; in distributed systems, "node identity" is relational. Twenty-five centuries ago, Buddhism already noted this: the self is a process, not a thing.

Contemporary Application
Everyday: When emotion surges, observe which aggregate is at work — is it vedanā (raw discomfort)? saṃjñā (an automatic narrative)? saṃskāra (a habit-reaction)? Disassembling the "I" loosens its grip.
BigCat: In a parenting conflict, decompose "my child has provoked me" into form, sensation, perception, formations, consciousness. You will find that the provocation is not a fact but a synthesis of cognition and habit. This is using Buddhist analysis as emotional debugging — more sustainable than simple suppression.
In Brief
The Five Aggregates teaching dissolves the notion of a fixed self into five dynamic processes — form, sensation, perception, mental formations, and consciousness. Realizing their emptiness (the lack of inherent essence) liberates one from clinging and suffering. The self is a verb, not a noun.
Question to Sit With
If "I" is only the temporary gathering of five aggregates, then the thing weighing most on you today — is "you" troubled by it, or is some single aggregate running on autopilot?