This article introduces the psychology of Evoluist orientation — a philosophical-psychological research programme that explores the human consequences of post-totalising thought. Evoluism does not offer a new final worldview, clinical therapy, spiritual hierarchy, or superior stage of consciousness. Instead, it examines what happens when the deep human need for finality is no longer met through possession of a final picture of Reality, but is transformed into a disciplined, non-totalising orientation. Drawing on the core Evoluist distinction between Reality as limit and worlds as conditioned regimes of distinctions, the paper analyses the shift from worldview possession to post-totalising orientation. It introduces key concepts — totalisation, worldview possession, post-totalising orientation, register literacy, and register collapse — and shows how truth, meaning, faith, and responsible action can remain possible and serious without any register or worldview claiming final authority over Reality. Explicitly programmatic and self-limiting, this article does not present empirical data or therapeutic methods. It opens a field of inquiry into how human beings can preserve existential depth, commitment, and intellectual honesty after relinquishing the dream of a final worldview.
M. Evoluit (Tue,) studied this question.