I published the Manifesto of Human Lucidity as an essay about perception, technology, time, and society.
The central point is simple: the collective obsession with distant mysteries often works as an elegant distraction. While the internet amplifies theories, speculation, and rushed conclusions, concrete problems remain in front of us, asking for lucidity, responsibility, and practical action.
The text starts from examples such as crop circles, extraterrestrial speculation, and cosmic communication to defend a broader idea: not every mystery requires a fantastic explanation. In many cases, what is missing is a better understanding of the human, technical, and social processes that already exist.
The here and now
The reflection also moves through the scale of the universe, the barriers of space-time, and the biological limits of human life. But the conclusion is not pessimistic. On the contrary: it gives value back to the present.
If time is the scarcest resource we have, perhaps lucidity is less about looking for impossible answers in the stars and more about living attentively with what is within reach: home, family, conversation, food, care, well-made work, and the real systems we can still improve.
The full PDF is available for anyone who wants to read the complete manifesto.