On Searching is a lyric-philosophical essay that asks what the human impulse to find is actually reaching for. It opens on the paradox the ancients already named — how can you search for what you do not yet know? — and answers, with Plato's anamnesis, that the search is possible because we already half-remember what we seek. From there it traces a direction of travel drawn from the author's companion prose piece Home and from Novalis's claim that philosophy is homesickness: the search begins within the self, extends to those we love, and only then turns toward the stars. The essay then narrows to the organ of searching itself, moving through the optics of sight and two strands of current neuroscience — a directly mapped occipito-limbic pathway (the OHSB tract) and the measured lag and back-dating of conscious perception — to argue that no one experiences the present in real time. These become evidence for the author's "jays" framework: alignment, intent, and the legible traces a life leaves through time. The closing turn points the search outward, toward a shared and coherent good, situated within Toward a Theory of Coherent Existence. Speculative claims are flagged as speculative throughout.
Jamison Johsnon (Fri,) studied this question.
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