I have been a life long "analyst". By analyst I mean that break down everything I perceive in a very systemic and logical fashion. This has set me on a path that exalts things like empirical data, the scientific method and a need for adequate evidence before spouting anything as truth. Now you may think this means I don't do a lot of spouting, but I assure you I do. I simply do not spout anything as truth. My method for achieving this is a personal philosophy along the lines of "Everything is true in some sense, false in some sense and meaningless in some sense".
It is apparent to me that in recent centuries the expansion of the human race is on an exponential curve. One century we are using steam or coal to power trains the next we are going nuclear. We are able to do so much with the knowledge we have gained in the fields of philosophy, biology, medicine, mathematics, chemistry, physics, psychology and plethora of other fields of study. The human race now has a fairly rigid framework of the world. We know that you cannot go faster than light, and that simply by cleaning ourselves regularly we can drastically affect the rate of infection in the face of epidemic. We know so very much! But we also know very little. With all the knowledge we have gained we have lost something. Something that comes from deep within. We have lost the sense of wonder. We are no longer left to ponder how a "god" or pantheon thereof has constructed the universe. We no longer ponder what new lands may be across the sea. We don't even need to wonder if our unborn children will be a girl or a boy.
There is such certainty in the minds of people and I argue that it has driven that sense of wonder away because it is easier to think we know than to question what we know. But where this leaves us is somewhat of a strange place. The people drift in a state of fear because they are so certain that the world will do what it does they give no thought to what they would do if it didn't. They have become complacent entities that simply fit a role. They fear deviation from the norm because the deviation is what makes us question ourselves and our understandings. We fear questioning ourselves and by fearing this we have been instilled with a fear of questioning others. Or the "wrong" kind of questioning because we don't want to seem silly, or stupid or divergent. This means that we will not only fail to question ourselves but we will most certainly fail to question our superiors.
What are we cheating ourselves out of you might ask? We are cheating ourselves out of the truth. The truth that the truth is constantly evolving and that we must constantly change and evolve with it. We are cheating ourselves out of a person truth in lieu of a broader more all encompassing truth. The problem with this so called all encompassing truth is that its very definition betrays the nature of truth since truth pertains to a particular. A force in society wants us to listen to the "truth" that comes from the powers that be and obey them, not search for a truth that is subjective and internal.
I believe that by not searching for that subjective, internal truth particular to their own experience a majority of humans are missing out on the experience of life. This majority takes the truth given to them and believes it rather than perceiving the world around them and forming their own truth.
If you can make your own truth, you can make your own world.