You are the Universe Experiencing Itself | Spinoza's God
Aperture's 48 minute portrait of Baruch Spinoza, the excommunicated lens grinder who argued that God and Nature are one and the same thing, and that you are the cosmos briefly waking up to look at itself. It moves from the stardust in your bones and Einstein's famous telegram through Deus sive Natura, the impersonal God who neither listens nor judges, the illusion of free will, and the strange peace of the intellectual love of God. On this page it is read alongside Fred's own cosmology at god.nixfred.com, with an honest accounting of where Fred and Spinoza agree and where Fred keeps walking past him.
Published Jun 14, 202648:39 video22 min readAdded Jun 14, 2026Open on YouTube →
At a glance
This is a 48 minute meditation on Baruch Spinoza, the 17th century lens grinder who looked at the universe and concluded that God and Nature are not two things but one, and that you are not a visitor to the cosmos but the cosmos briefly waking up and looking at itself. Aperture builds the case patiently: the stardust in your bones, Einstein's famous telegram, Spinoza's excommunication, the single idea (Deus sive Natura) that detonated under European religion, the impersonal God who neither listens nor judges, the illusion of free will, and the strange peace Spinoza called the intellectual love of God.
It lands on a sentence that has become almost a modern mantra: you are the universe experiencing itself. What makes this one worth a full page on this site is that Fred has spent his own quiet years arriving at nearly the same place by a different road, written down at god.nixfred.com. So this is the video in full, read alongside Fred's own cosmology, with an honest accounting at the end of exactly where the lens grinder and Fred agree, and where Fred keeps walking after Spinoza stops.
Stardust, and a telegram to Einstein
The opening is the hook the whole film hangs on. Look up at the night sky and the stars feel familiar, and there is a literal reason for that: every atom in your body was forged in the heart of a star. The calcium in your bones, the iron in your blood, the oxygen in your lungs, all of it cooked in cosmic furnaces billions of years before Earth existed, then drifted across the universe and, for one brief moment, arranged itself into something that could look back up and feel awe. As the narrator puts it, "the universe became you."
That is Spinoza's thesis in a single image, and it has a famous endorsement. In 1929 a rabbi cabled Albert Einstein to ask, do you believe in God? Einstein answered: "I believe in Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the lawful harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with the fate and actions of human beings." Two sentences that have echoed through science and religion ever since, and the doorway into everything that follows.
The most dangerous question in Amsterdam
Spinoza was born in Amsterdam in 1632 to a family of Sephardic Jews who had fled the Portuguese Inquisition, where Jews were tortured, executed, and forced to convert. Amsterdam was a rare refuge, and its Jewish community was bound tightly by shared trauma. There, religion was not just belief; it was identity, protection, and survival. To question it was to threaten the structure keeping everyone alive.
The young Spinoza was brilliant, quiet, and curious enough that everyone assumed he would become a rabbi. Instead he began asking the dangerous questions: should scripture be read literally, does God truly intervene, do miracles happen, is the soul really immortal. In the 17th century these were not seminar topics; they could end your life. And Spinoza did not merely reject the conventional God, he dismantled the whole frame beneath it. The common picture was a supreme ruler outside the universe, creating it, judging behavior, rewarding virtue, punishing sin, answering prayers. Spinoza looked at that and saw humanity projecting itself onto the cosmos, imagining God as a giant version of a human because it could not picture anything else.
The cost was brutal. At just 23 he received the harshest excommunication decree in the community's history: cursed by day and by night, no one permitted to speak to him, help him, read him, or even stand near him. In the 1600s that was not cancellation, it was psychological annihilation, since the community was survival itself. His family was expected to abandon him. A religious fanatic later tried to stab him in the street. And yet he never answered with bitterness. He left quietly, ground lenses for microscopes and telescopes to earn a modest living, published much of his work anonymously because the ideas were lethal, and kept writing, because he believed humanity was suffering from one enormous misunderstanding about the nature of reality.
1632Born in Amsterdam to Sephardic Jews who had fled the Portuguese Inquisition.
1656At just 23, handed the harshest excommunication in the community's history. Cursed, shunned, erased from communal life.
1660sLives simply, grinds lenses for microscopes and telescopes, writes, publishes anonymously, survives a knife attack by a fanatic.
1677Dies at 44, leaving no church, no movement, no disciples. His Ethics is published months later.
1929Asked if he believes in God, Einstein answers: "I believe in Spinoza's God." The lens grinder outlives everyone who cursed him.
Figure 1. One quiet life cut against the grain of its century. Spinoza lost his entire world at 23 for asking whether God was really separate from the universe, and never took the question back.
Deus sive Natura: God or Nature
The misunderstanding, and its cure, reduce to one phrase: Deus sive Natura, God or Nature. It sounds poetic and harmless. In the 17th century it was philosophical dynamite, because Spinoza did not mean that God created nature, or that nature reflects God's beauty. He meant that God and the universe are literally the same thing. One reality, one substance, one infinite existence expressing itself in endless forms.
His argument is almost embarrassingly simple. If God is truly infinite, nothing can exist outside God, because anything outside would be a boundary, and a boundary is a limit, and a limit means God is not infinite after all. So there can be only one infinite reality that contains everything within itself. Some people call that God, others call it Nature; the two words name the same thing from different angles. This is substance monism: beneath all apparent diversity, reality is fundamentally one.
The image the video leans on is the ocean. Waves look separate, one crashing hard, another rolling gently, but no wave is a thing in itself. Each is just the ocean briefly taking a shape. You are a wave. You feel separate because your mind draws a border around your body, your memories, your name, but the border is conceptual. Every breath depends on trees and oceans; every thought depends on language, biology, history, and physical law reaching back billions of years. In Spinoza's vocabulary, particular things (you, animals, galaxies, clouds, memories, civilizations) are modes, temporary modifications of the one substance.
This also dissolves the oldest puzzle in philosophy, the mind body problem. Descartes had split mind and matter into two substances and then could never explain how they touch. Spinoza rejected the split. Mind and matter are not two substances, they are two attributes of one reality, thought and extension, two ways of perceiving the same thing, like two sides of one coin. Your thoughts are not floating outside nature. They are nature. He even split nature itself into Natura naturans, "naturing nature," the active eternal processes that generate reality, and Natura naturata, "natured nature," the finite things those processes produce. In modern terms, the underlying code of reality and the forms that run on it. Nothing stands outside the system, no supernatural realm interrupting from above.
Figure 2. Spinoza's whole metaphysics on one page. There is one infinite substance; "God" and "Nature" are two names for it. We perceive it through two attributes, thought and extension (mind and matter), and everything particular, including you, is a mode, a temporary form the one substance briefly takes.
The God who does not listen
Once God is identical with nature, the personal God of traditional religion quietly disappears, and this is what terrified the authorities. The God most people worship listens, judges, rewards, punishes, loves, gets angry, forgives, intervenes. Spinoza's God does none of it. It does not love you, but it does not hate you either; it has no emotions at all, because emotion implies change and change implies imperfection, and nothing exists outside the infinite to provoke a reaction in it. No chosen people, no preferences, no plans for nations. Nature follows its laws with absolute consistency whether or not humans approve.
So there are no miracles, because a miracle would be God contradicting his own nature; the laws are what God is, and nature cannot break its own laws. What people call a miracle is just an event whose cause they do not understand; human ignorance manufactures superstition, the way ancient people saw lightning and imagined divine anger. Prayer that asks God to rearrange reality for personal benefit Spinoza saw as a kind of narcissism, the infinite structure of being expected to reorganize itself around one person's wishes.
Harsh, but not cruel in intent. The striking thing, and the narrator says it plainly, is that this impersonal vision feels more reverent than the genie God so many people actually worship. The poet Novalis called Spinoza "the God intoxicated man," because dissolving the distance between God and world makes every star divine, every living thing an expression of the infinite, the laws of physics themselves sacred because they are the very structure of God. Reality itself becomes holy. This is exactly the awe Einstein felt before the mathematical harmony of the cosmos, and why he reached for Spinoza when a rabbi asked him about God.
The conscious stone: free will, conatus, and emotions
At the center of the living world Spinoza puts conatus, the drive of every thing to persist in its own existence. A plant reaches for light, an animal flees danger, a person seeks security, love, meaning. This striving is not a feature added to life; it is life. And emotions, in this frame, are not sins or virtues but signals of changes in your power to exist and act: joy is the felt sense of increasing vitality, sadness of something diminishing it, love is joy linked to an external cause, hate its opposite. He treated emotion almost as a science, with causes you can trace, rather than moral weather descending from outside.
Which forces the hardest question: if every action flows from prior causes, what happens to free will? Spinoza's answer is one of the most unsettling in philosophy: free will, in the absolute sense people imagine, does not exist. We feel free because we experience our desires from the inside while staying blind to the causes that produced them. His famous image is a stone thrown through the air; if the stone were conscious, it would feel certain it had chosen to fly. You did not choose your genes, your culture, your childhood, your language, your nervous system, or the historical moment that shaped you, and the video notes that modern experiments repeatedly find brain activity tied to a decision firing before you are consciously aware of choosing. Spinoza saw this centuries before the brain scan.
But this is not fatalism, and that is the move that redeems the whole bleak picture. Understanding the causes is the path to freedom. A person consumed by rage feels powerful and is in fact completely unfree, owned by a state they did not author. Spinoza splits passive emotions (which run us when we do not understand their causes, like a day swallowed by an insult online) from active understanding (which gives the power to respond rather than react). And understanding dissolves hatred, because hatred depends on imagining people as freely choosing evil out of nowhere; see the causes and condemnation softens into compassion. That reframes morality itself, away from blame and punishment toward understanding, cooperation, and human flourishing.
Figure 3. Spinoza's definition of freedom. A passive emotion lets the cause run you directly; you are acted upon. Slip understanding in between, see why the cause is what it is, and you can respond rather than react. Freedom is not escaping the chain of causes, it is comprehending it.
Under the aspect of eternity
This points at the highest state Spinoza could imagine, seeing reality sub specie aeternitatis, under the aspect of eternity. Most of us live trapped in an intensely narrow frame: personal anxieties feel enormous, a criticism feels catastrophic, a failed plan feels like the universe collapsing, because the ego places itself at the center of everything. That narrowness, Spinoza thought, is the source of most suffering.
The alternative is to step back mentally until your single life becomes one small expression of a vastly larger process: civilizations rising and falling, ecosystems evolving over millions of years, stars condensing and exploding into the elements that became you, your body made of matter older than the Earth. From there, freedom is not standing outside the laws of the universe, it is aligning yourself consciously with reality instead of fighting it blindly. The video's image is a swimmer caught in a current: panic if you do not understand the water, but a sailor who knows the tides navigates the same sea with power. The laws never changed; knowledge changed your relationship to them.
The intellectual love of God
And out of all that comes Spinoza's most beautiful idea, the intellectual love of God, which sounds religious and means something almost entirely different: the joy of understanding reality itself. It is the feeling under a dark sky thick with the Milky Way, before a vast mountain range, inside music that suspends your inner monologue, or in a piece of mathematics like the golden ratio or quantum mechanics that suddenly makes the world click. The ego shrinks while existence feels larger and more meaningful at once. Spinoza thought this could become a stable way of living, not a rare peak: the more deeply you grasp the interconnected structure of things, the more consciously you participate in the infinite whole, and that participation is joy.
He turned spirituality into understanding, and the video notes the striking parallels he reached by pure reason that Eastern traditions reached by other means: Advaita Vedanta's identity of self and universal consciousness, Buddhism's suffering born of clinging to a separate ego, Daoism's harmony with the flow. And science keeps catching up to him: ecology shows organisms cannot exist apart from their environments, quantum entanglement keeps particles correlated across distance, neuroscience shows how constructed the self is, cosmology shows every atom came from stellar explosions. Carl Sagan's line, "we are a way for the cosmos to know itself," could almost be Spinoza's epitaph.
Why, then, did this breathtaking vision never replace traditional religion? Because, the narrator observes honestly, people do not live by ideas alone. Religions survived not just by explaining reality but by building ritual, community, music, architecture, shared story, and a place to put grief and mortality. A vision, however beautiful, rarely meets the emotional needs of a whole civilization. Still, Spinoza's influence spread underground: he helped lay the foundations of the Enlightenment, secular democracy, freedom of thought, and the separation of church and state, and was rediscovered generation after generation because he offered something rare, a way to feel spiritually connected to existence without giving up reason.
You are the universe experiencing itself
When Spinoza died in 1677 he left no church, no movement, no disciples, and his ideas outlived the authorities who cursed him, because he understood something humanity cannot move past. The modern world feels psychologically fragmented: people experience themselves as isolated, cut off from nature, each other, and their own minds, while technology turns identity into performance and loneliness and anxiety climb even as connectivity does, and polarization splits societies into tribes that cannot understand one another. Underneath all of it, Spinoza would say, is the single illusion he spent his life attacking, the illusion of separateness.
He offers no easy fix; what he offers is hard. A vision where every living thing belongs to one unfolding process, where understanding replaces hatred, where freedom comes through knowledge rather than domination, and where the spiritual is found not by escaping the universe but by recognizing you were never apart from it. You are not a disconnected observer floating through an alien cosmos. You are made of ancient stars, your mind emerged from the same reality that makes black holes and oceans, and for a brief moment the universe arranged itself into someone who could ask about its own existence. You were never separate from the universe. You are the universe experiencing itself. The video closes with the narrator's own confession, that the more he has learned through math, science, and code, the more Deus sive Natura has started to feel strangely real, before handing off to the episode's sponsor.
Fred's take: The Universe As I See It
Here is why this video earned a place in the library and not just a bookmark. Fred has written his own cosmology at god.nixfred.com, "The Universe As I See It," and large parts of it are Spinoza arrived at independently, from a life rather than a library. His central claim is word for word the lens grinder's: "I believe God and the Universe are the same thing. Not a feeling. The same thing." And his gloss on the laws of physics is Deus sive Natura exactly: "The laws of physics, gravity, light, the way atoms hold together, are not rules God wrote. They are what God is. Kindness is not something a kind person invented, it is simply their nature."
The deepest echo is the video's own thesis. Where Aperture ends on "you are the universe experiencing itself," Fred writes that the universe "started as one thing that appears to have spread out. It is still one thing. Pretending to be many so it can look back at itself and feel like it is meeting someone new." His version of substance monism is "one Consciousness, billions of Receivers, all tuned to the One broadcast," and his version of the ocean and the wave is the claim that "in a real sense I am the same person everyone else is, looking out through a different Receiver." He even grounds the unity in physics the film only gestures at: at the first instant everything was packed into one point and everything touched everything, and "in physics, when things interact they become entangled," so underneath the surface "we were never actually separate."
But Fred does not stop where Spinoza stops, and that is the interesting part. He keeps several things the lens grinder deliberately threw away. He reads the fine tuning of the universe's constants as pointing to God, and he is honest that this is "faith the evidence supports rather than faith the evidence demands." He believes the brain does not make consciousness but receives it, "the way a radio does not create the music," so that death is "a radio breaking, not a Soul ending," and when the Receiver stops the Signal rejoins the One. He holds block time, where past, present, and future already exist at once, and a branching of every possibility into "one enormous structure holding all of it." He takes the quantum measurement puzzle further than the video dares, to "Consciousness is not a byproduct of the Universe. It may be the thing that makes the Universe real," with Genesis read as creation and observation together. And he keeps a personal center Spinoza had no room for: "Jesus was God choosing to enter His own Creation," the one teacher who "defeated Death," and a practice where "all thought is prayer" and "where you put your Mind is how you steer your Life."
Where Spinoza and Fred part ways (my read)
Set the two side by side and the agreement is genuine and deep. Both collapse God and universe into one substance. Both treat the laws of physics as the nature of God rather than God's tools. Both see the self as a temporary local expression of one whole, separateness as the surface illusion, and the felt unity of it all as the closest thing to worship. Both even land in the same place on free will: Spinoza says the absolute kind does not exist, and Fred quietly agrees, keeping only the softer steering of "attention nudges which path out of all possible paths we actually walk into," which a many worlds picture can just about carry.
agree "The same thing. Physics is God's nature, not God's invention."
You and the cosmos
A mode; the universe experiencing itself.
agree "One Consciousness, billions of Receivers," one thing "pretending to be many so it can look back at itself."
Free will
The absolute kind is an illusion; we are blind to our causes.
agree No absolute free will; attention only "nudges which path" among the branches.
After death
Impersonal eternity; no personal survival.
diverge The Signal survives the Receiver and rejoins the One.
Purpose and design
No final causes; reading purpose into nature is projection.
diverge Fine tuning "points to God," held as "faith the evidence supports."
Observation and reality
Reality is complete and necessary with or without observers.
diverge Consciousness "may be the thing that makes the Universe real."
Jesus
No incarnation, no resurrection in the system.
diverge "God choosing to enter His own Creation," and defeating death.
Figure 4. Where the lens grinder and Fred meet, and where Fred keeps walking. The top three rows are nearly the same person thinking three centuries apart. The bottom four are the warmth and continuity Spinoza deliberately refused and Fred deliberately keeps.
The divergences are real, though, and worth naming plainly. Spinoza's God is impersonal to the bone: no purpose, no plan, no final causes, and crucially no personal survival. The "eternal" in his philosophy is the cold eternity of mathematical truth, not a Signal that returns home intact; the part of your mind that is eternal in Spinoza is not the part that remembers being you. Fred's Receiver and Signal put the warmth back, a continuity of the person that Spinoza spent paragraphs arguing against. Spinoza also rejected teleology outright, so he would not read fine tuning as pointing anywhere; design, to him, is exactly the human projection he warned about, and Fred knows this, which is why he files it under faith rather than proof. On the quantum point they actually pull in opposite directions: Fred says consciousness may make the universe real, while Spinoza's reality is complete and necessary whether or not anyone observes it, since thought and extension run in parallel and neither conjures the other. And then there is Jesus. Spinoza was an excommunicated Jew with no incarnation and no resurrection in his system; Fred's God steps inside creation and walks back out of death. That is not a footnote to Spinoza, it is a different load bearing wall.
So my honest read is this: Fred is about eighty percent Spinozist and entirely sincere about it, and the other twenty percent is the part that matters most to him, the part where the universe is not only one and not only beautiful but also personal, continuous, and ultimately kind. Spinoza offered a God you could understand and be at peace with but never be held by. Fred wants to be held. He has taken the monism, the interconnection, the awe, and the refusal of the genie God, and grafted onto it a continuity of soul and a Christ that Spinoza's logic excludes, and he does it with eyes open, ending not on a proof but on a posture: "made of it, aware of it, asking about it. I do not think that is an accident. I cannot prove it isn't. I just stopped needing to." Spinoza would have admired the honesty even where he disagreed with the conclusion. The video says you are the universe experiencing itself. Fred says yes, and the experiencing does not end when the Receiver does.
Chapters
Click any timestamp and the floating player jumps there and keeps playing.
0:00 Spinoza and the Stardust Inside Us
1:37 The God of Einstein
9:15 Deus Sive Natura
18:02 God is Dead
23:50 The Illusion of Free Will
32:32 Sub Specie Aeternitatis
36:32 The intellectual love of God
42:17 You are the Universe experiencing itself
Notable quotes
I believe in Spinoza's God who reveals himself in the lawful harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with the fate and actions of human beings.
Albert Einstein, 1:37
You are either a Spinozist or not a philosopher at all.
Hegel, quoted at 4:30
We are a way for the cosmos to know itself.
Carl Sagan, quoted near 38:00
Your thoughts are not floating outside of nature. They are nature.
Aperture narrator, 16:00
Freedom is not existing outside of the universe's laws. Freedom is aligning yourself consciously with reality rather than fighting blindly against it.
Aperture narrator, 30:00
You were never separate from the universe. You are the universe experiencing itself.
Aperture narrator, 42:17
I believe God and the Universe are the same thing. Not a feeling. The same thing.
Fred Nix, god.nixfred.com
Resources mentioned
Baruch Spinoza, Ethics (the source of substance monism, conatus, and the intellectual love of God).
Spinoza's Deus sive Natura, and his distinction between Natura naturans and Natura naturata.
Albert Einstein's 1929 telegram reply to Rabbi Herbert Goldstein.
Hegel on Spinoza; Nietzsche on the rejection of free will; Freud on hidden motivation; Novalis, "the God intoxicated man."
Carl Sagan, "we are a way for the cosmos to know itself."
Modern science the film leans on: quantum entanglement, neuroscience of decision (pre-conscious brain activity), ecology, cosmology (stellar nucleosynthesis).
Fred's own cosmology: god.nixfred.com, "The Universe As I See It."
Brilliant.org (the video's sponsor).
The one idea to walk away with
The boundary between you and everything else is thinner than it feels, and possibly not there at all. Spinoza got to that by pure reason and stopped at an impersonal, magnificent unity. Fred got to the same unity by living, and kept going until it became personal and continuous. Watch the video for the clearest version of the first journey, and read god.nixfred.com for where the second one leads. Either way, for a brief moment, the universe arranged itself into someone capable of asking about its own existence, and right now that someone is you.
Full transcript
You look up at the night sky and at first it doesn't feel real. The stars are too distant, too ancient, too impossibly vast for you to fully comprehend. Thousands of tiny lights scattered across an endless darkness. Each one a sun, many older than our species itself. And yet somehow, despite all of that distance, they feel familiar, like something buried deep inside of you recognizes them. Maybe that's because, in a very literal sense, you belong to them. Every atom in your body was forged in the heart of a star. The calcium in your bones, the iron in your blood, the oxygen in your lungs, all of it was born in cosmic furnaces billions of years ago. Long before the Earth ever existed, every atom inside you traveled across the universe for unimaginable stretches of time. And then for one brief moment in cosmic history, the universe arranged itself into something capable of looking up at the stars in awe. The universe became you. This is the philosophy of Baroo Spinosa. The idea that you, me, every living thing are not separate from the universe, but expressions of it. That consciousness itself is the cosmos becoming aware of its own existence. And that there is no God watching over the universe, but the universe itself is God. In 1929, a rabbi sent Albert Einstein a telegram asking a simple question. Do you believe in God? Einstein replied with a sentence that would echo through philosophy, science, and religion to this very day. He said, quote, I believe in Spinosa's God who reveals himself in the lawful harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with the fate and actions of human beings. Baroo Spininoza was born in Amsterdam in 1632 during a time when Europe was consumed by religious conflict and intellectual upheaval. His family were Sephardic Jews who had escaped Portugal during the Inquisition, a time when Jews were tortured, executed, and forced to convert to Christianity. Amsterdam became a refuge for these displaced communities. One of the few places in Europe where they could practice their faith with relative freedom. The Jewish community there was tightly bound together by shared trauma and survival. Religion was not simply belief. It was identity, protection, and continuity. To challenge it was to threaten the fragile structure holding the community together. Spininoza grew up immersed in this world. He studied Hebrew scripture, Jewish philosophy, and religious law. By all accounts, he was brilliant, quiet, and deeply curious. So much so that everyone around him expected he would become a rabbi. But sometime in his late teens, he began to ask dangerous questions. He wanted to know whether scripture should be interpreted literally. He questioned whether God truly intervened in human affairs. He doubted the existence of miracles. He wondered if the soul was really immortal. Today, these might seem like just abstract academic debates, but in the 17th century, these were ideas that could destroy your life. What made Spininoza especially threatening was that he did not merely reject religion in the conventional sense. He dismantled the entire framework beneath it. Most people at the time imagined God as a supreme ruler, standing outside of the universe, guiding history like a king governs a kingdom. God created the world, judged human behavior, rewarded virtue, punished sin, and listened to prayers.
Spinosza looked at this image of God and concluded it was nothing more than humanity projecting itself onto the cosmos. Humans imagined God as a giant version of themselves because they could not conceive of reality in any other way. For Spinosa, the universe did not revolve around human desires, fears, or moral dramas. Nature followed laws. Everything unfolded through necessity. The stars moved according to physical principles. Storms formed through atmospheric conditions. Human emotions emerged through chains of causes extending far beyond conscious awareness. There was no divine hand suspending the laws of reality whenever humans demanded special treatment. This was an almost impossible idea for his contemporaries to accept because it shattered the comforting structure of existence. If God does not intervene, then suffering is not part of some cosmic moral narrative. If miracles do not exist, then nature is indifferent to prayer. If humans are not uniquely favored by creation, then we are not the center of reality. Spinosa forced people to confront a universe that operated independently of human wishes. Yet, strangely, his philosophy was not cold or nihilistic. In fact, many people who read Spinosa describe the opposite reaction. They experience an overwhelming sense of connection. Because if God is not separate from nature, then every living thing becomes part of the same infinite process. The boundary between self and the universe begins to dissolve. You are no longer a lonely creature trapped in a hostile cosmos. You are an expression of the cosmos itself. This is why Spininoza has fascinated such radically different thinkers across history. Hegel said, quote, "You are either a Spinosist or not a philosopher at all." Nze admired his rejection of free will and divine morality. Freud saw traces of psychoanalysis in Spinosa's understanding of hidden motivations. Even modern neuroscientists and physicists continue to find parallels between Spinosa's vision and contemporary understandings of the interconnected systems in the cosmos. But in Spinosa's own lifetime, these ideas made him one of the most hated men in Amsterdam. At just 23 years old, the Jewish authorities issued the harshest excommunication decree in their community's history. The document is shocking even today. It cursed him by day and by night, forbade anyone from speaking to him, helping him, reading his writings, or even standing within a certain distance of him. He was completely erased from communal life. There was no path for him for forgiveness, no chance for reconciliation. His family was expected to abandon him entirely. Imagine what that meant in the 1600s. Excommunication was not merely social embarrassment or cancel culture the way we think of it today. It was psychological annihilation. Your community was survival. To lose it meant isolation, poverty, and vulnerability. Spinosa lost his entire world because he refused to stop asking questions. And yet, even after all of that, he never responded with bitterness. He quietly left the community, earned a modest living, grinding lenses for microscopes and telescopes, and devoted the rest of his life to philosophy. He lived simply, rejected fame, and published many of his works anonymously because he knew how dangerous his ideas were. Assassination attempts were not uncommon for people accused of heresy. At one point, a religious fanatic even tried to stab him in the street, but Spininoza kept writing because he believed humanity suffered from a profound misunderstanding about reality.
People believed they were separate from nature, separate from one another, separate from God. And from this illusion emerged fear, superstition, hatred, and endless conflict. His goal was not simply to criticize religion. It was to replace humanity's entire understanding of existence with something radically different. A vision where the universe was one unified substance expressing itself through infinite forms. A reality where every human being, every animal, every plant, and every star were interconnected manifestations of the same eternal process. And at the center of this vision was one revolutionary phrase, deos cve nura, god or nature. At first glance the phrase sounds poetic, almost harmless. But in the 17th century, it was a philosophical dynamite because Spininoza was not saying that God created nature or that nature reflected God's beauty. He meant something far more radical. That God and the universe are literally the same thing. One reality, one substance, one infinite existence expressing itself in endless forms. To understand why this idea was so revolutionary, we have to understand the worldview that Spinosa inherited. For most people in Europe at the time, reality was divided in two separate layers. God existed above the universe as a transcendental creator. Human beings existed below him as independent souls inhabiting material bodies. Nature itself was treated almost like a machine built by divine hands. There was God, there was humanity and then there was the physical world. Spinosa looked at this separation and believed that it made no sense. He asked a deceptively simple question. If God is truly infinite, then how could anything exist outside of God? If something exists independently from God, then God would no longer be infinite because there would be something beyond him. Just pause and think about that for a moment. Once you imagine reality as being divided into separate entities, you create boundaries. and boundaries imply limitation which negates the existence of an infinite being. So Spinosa arrived at a very startling conclusion. There can only be one infinite being in existence. One infinite reality that contains everything within itself. That single substance is what some people call God, while others call it nature. The two words describe the same thing just from different perspectives. This idea became known as substance monism. The belief that beneath all apparent diversity, reality is fundamentally one. Think about the ocean. On the surface, you see waves rising and falling, each appearing separate from the others. One wave crashes violently against the shore while another moves gently through open water. But none of them are truly independent things. Every wave is simply the ocean expressing itself in temporary forms. For Spinosa, human beings are like those waves. You feel separate because your mind draws boundaries around your body, your thoughts, your memories, and your identity. But those boundaries are conceptual. In reality, you are inseparable from the infinite network of causes and processes surrounding you. And we can see this quite literally at play. Every breath you take depends on trees and oceans. Every thought emerging in your mind depends on language, biology, history, culture, and physical laws extending back billions of years. Your existence is not self-contained. It is an expression of the entire universe unfolding in one particular form. Spinosa believed everything that exists is part of the same eternal substance expressing itself through different modes.
A mode is essentially a temporary modification of reality, a particular pattern within the whole. Humans are modes, animals are modes, galaxies, modes, clouds, forests, planets, memories, and civilization are all finite expressions of the same infinite substance. This also changed how Spinosa understood the mind and the body. For centuries, philosophers struggled with the relationship between consciousness and matter. How can thoughts exist in a physical universe? How does an immaterial soul interact with a material body? Daycart famously argued that mind and body were separate substances. But even he couldn't fully explain how these two fundamental different realities could still affect one another. Spinosa rejected the problem entirely because he rejected the separation beneath it. He argued that mind and matter are not different substances. They are different attributes of the same underlying reality. Humans can perceive reality through two primary attributes, thought and extension. Thought refers to consciousness, ideas, and mental experience. Extension refers to physical matter occupying space. But these are simply two ways of perceiving the same substance. Imagine looking at a coin from two angles. One side appears different from the other, but both belong to the same object. In the same way, every physical event has a corresponding mental aspect because mind and matter are parallel expressions of one underlying reality. Your thoughts are not floating outside of nature. They are nature. This is one reason Spinosa feels strangely modern. Neuroscience increasingly reveals how thoughts, emotions, and decisions emerge from physical processes in the brain. It's not ephemeral the way we once thought it was. Psychology shows how deeply human behavior is shaped by causes outside of conscious awareness. Ecology demonstrates how interconnected living systems truly are. Again and again, modern science moves away from describing things as isolated substances and towards interconnected processes. Spinosa anticipated this centuries earlier through pure philosophy. He even distinguished between two dimensions of nature itself. He called them natura natirons and natura naturata. The first means naturing nature. This refers to the active eternal processes generating reality. The infinite laws and forces through which existence continuously unfolds. The second means natured nature. This refers to all the finite things produced by those processes. That is trees, rivers, stars, animals, you and me. In modern language, you could think of it as the difference between the underlying code of reality and the temporary forms emerging from that code. The important point is that nothing stands outside of this system. There is no supernatural realm interrupting nature from above. No external creator stepping in to suspend physical laws whenever humans demand miracles. Everything follows necessarily from the structure of reality itself. For Spininoza, this necessity was not oppressive. It was beautiful. Most people experience reality as chaotic because they only see fragments of it. They judge events according to personal desires and fears. When something benefits them, they call it good. When something harms them, they call it evil. But Spinosa believed these categories reflected human perspective rather than any kind of objective truth. From the viewpoint of the universe itself, everything unfolds according to necessity. The stars explode. Species evolve. Civilizations rise and collapse. Human beings fall in love. They suffer. They create art. They wage war. And they die. And none of these are interruptions in reality.
They are reality expressing itself through infinite transformations. This perspective changes something fundamental about human identity. You stop seeing yourself as an isolated ego dropped into an alien universe. Instead, you begin seeing yourself as a localized expression of the same forces shaping everything else. The atoms inside your body were forged in ancient stars. The oxygen in your lungs was breathed by countless organisms before you existed. Your consciousness emerged from evolutionary processes stretching back billions of years. The boundary between you and the universe becomes harder and harder to define. And this is precisely why Spinosa terrified religious authorities. Because once God becomes identical with nature, the personal God of traditional religions begins to disappear. The God that most people worship is deeply human. He listens, judges, rewards, punishes, loves, gets angry, forgives, and intervenes. Traditional religion imagines the universe as a moral drama centered around humanity. Spinosa dismantled all of it. God doesn't love you, but hey, neither does he hate you. He has no emotions because emotions imply change and change implies imperfection. A being who becomes angry or pleased is reacting to events outside of themselves. But for Spinosa, God is infinite reality itself. Nothing exists outside him to provoke those emotional reactions. To Spinosa, God has no preferences, no chosen people, no divine plans for nations or individuals. The universe doesn't revolve around human morality. Nature follows laws with absolute consistency, whether humans approve of the outcomes or not. The more I read about Spininoza, the more I feel like he honors the idea of God more than most religious people I've met who treat God like some random genie who grants wishes. Some of these religious people in his day condemned him as the prince of atheists who was secretly trying to destroy religion itself. But people who actually read him had the opposite reaction. Instead of eliminating spirituality, Spinosa transformed it into something vast and impersonal. The romantic poet Novales called him the God intoxicated man. Because there is something spiritually overwhelming about Spinosa's vision of reality. Instead of imagining God as a distant ruler watching the universe from above, Spinosa dissolves that distance entirely. Every star has suddenly become divine. Every living thing becomes an expression of the infinite. The laws of physics themselves become sacred because they are the structure of God's existence. In Spinosa's universe, there is no separation between the spiritual and the material world. Reality itself is holy. This is why Einstein admired him so deeply. Einstein rejected the idea of a personal god who interfered with nature. But he felt profound awe toward the mathematical harmony of the cosmos. For Einstein, this cosmic intelligibility inspired something close to religious reverence. I think Spininoza would have understood that perfectly. But his philosophy still came with devastating implications for traditional beliefs. There are no miracles in Spinosa's universe because miracles would require God contradicting his own nature. Religious traditions often define miracles as suspensions of natural law. Water turning into wine, seas parting, the dead returning to life. But Spinosa argued this idea makes no sense. If the laws of nature are expressions of God's essence, then violating them would mean God acting against himself. Nature cannot break its own laws because those laws are what nature is.
When people describe miracles, Spinosa believed they are actually describing events whose cause they simply do not understand. Human ignorance creates superstition. Ancient people saw lightning and imagined divine anger because they lacked scientific explanations. The less people understand nature, the more they project intention onto it. This also transformed his view of prayer. Most religious prayer assumes God can be persuaded to alter reality according to human desires. Like I said earlier, a genie. People ask for victories in war, protection from disease, financial success, or the recovery of loved ones. But for Spinosa, asking God to suspend the necessary order for personal profit reflected a profound misunderstanding of He saw this kind of prayer as a form of narcissism. Humans imagining the infinite structure of reality rearranging itself to please their individual wishes. And yeah, that does sound harsh, but Spininoza's goal wasn't cruelty. He believed humans suffered because they misunderstood their place within nature. People cling desperately to fantasies of control because reality feels uncertain and frightening. Religion often comforts this anxiety by promising cosmic justice and divine protection. But Spinosa thought genuine peace could only emerge through understanding reality as it truly is. And reality, in his view, was governed entirely by necessity. Every event emerges from prior causes extending infinitely backwards through time. A storm forms because atmospheric conditions produced it. A war occurs because of political tensions, economic pressures, psychological motivations, and silly, stupid humans. Spinosa believed wisdom begins when you stop viewing yourself as separate from nature and start understanding yourself as part of an infinite process. At the center of this process lies one of the most important concepts in his entire philosophy. Konatus, the drive of every living thing to persist in its own existence. Every living thing struggles to continue existing. Plants stretch their way towards sunlight. Animals fight for survival. Humans pursue security, recognition, love, power, pleasure, meaning. Beneath the complexity of civilization, philosophy and culture, there is a deeper movement driving life forward. A fundamental tendency to persist, to expand, and to express itself. Spinosa called this force konatus. The word is difficult to translate directly because spinosa meant something broader than a simple survival instinct. Konatus is the essence of a thing to strive to remain what it is. A tree pushes its roots deeper into soil. An animal avoids danger. A human being seeks experiences that strengthen their existence and avoids those that diminish it. For Spinoza, this striving is not something added on to life. It is life itself. You don't simply possess canatas as one feature among others. Your desire to continue existing is the very structure of your being. Basically, every living thing expresses itself through continuous existence. This is why emotions occupy such a central role in Spinosa's philosophy. Emotions aren't random spiritual disturbances or moral failings. They are signals reflecting changes in our power to exist and act. Joy emerges when something increases our vitality. Sadness emerges when something weakens it. Love is the experience of connecting joy to an external cause. Hate is the opposite. Spinosa approached emotions almost scientifically, treating them as natural phenomena governed by understandable laws rather than mysterious forces descending from an outside reality. This was revolutionary at the time because most moral systems before him framed emotions in terms of sin, of virtue, or spiritual strength or weakness.
Anger, lust, envy, fear were treated primarily as moral failings. Spinosa saw them differently. He believed emotions followed causal chains just like weather systems or biological processes. If someone lashes out in anger, that anger did not come from nowhere. It came from prior experiences, from insecurities, from environmental triggers, from physical conditions and psychological associations. Understanding those causes matters more than condemning the person morally. Again, Spinosa shifts the focus from judgment to understanding. But this raises a disturbing question. If every human action arises through prior causes, then what happens to free will? Well, Spinosza's answer remains one of the most worrisome ideas in philosophy. He believed free will, at least in the absolute sense that people imagine it, doesn't exist. Humans feel free because they experience desires internally while remaining unaware of the countless causes shaping those desires. Spinosa gives a famous example. Imagine a stone flying through the air after someone throws it. If the stone were conscious, it might believe it was freely choosing to move forward. It would experience motion while remaining unaware of the external forces determining its path. You think you freely chose your ambitions, your beliefs, your attractions, your fears, and your opinions. But look closely, and those choices begin dissolving into influences that you never consciously selected for yourself. You didn't choose your genes. You didn't choose the culture you were born into. You didn't choose your early childhood experiences, your language, your nervous system, the historical moments that shaped your life, or the social forces currently shaping your perception of reality. Every experience alters your brain and influences future decisions. Experiments repeatedly show that brain activity associated with decisions often happens before the conscious awareness of choosing. Much of what humans call free choice appears deeply conditioned by processes outside of our awareness. Spinosza saw this centuries before brain scans existed. But his philosophy was never meant to trap humanity in fatalism. He wasn't arguing that life is meaningless because everything is determined. In fact, he believed that understanding causation was the path to freedom. A person consumed by rage feels powerful in the moment. But Spinosa would say they are deeply unfree. Their emotional state controls them completely. The same applies to greed, obsession, tribal hatred, and compulsive behavior. When external circumstances dictate your internal state, you are being acted upon rather than acting from understanding. Spinosza distinguished between passive emotions and active understanding. Passive emotions dominate us when we do not understand their causes. Imagine someone insults you online and your entire day becomes consumed by resentment. Your mind loops endlessly around that event. You replay the argument internally. Your emotional state depends entirely on something outside of your control. In Spinosa's terms, you are experiencing passive effects. Your internal condition is being determined externally. But understanding changes this dynamic. The moment you begin seeing the causes behind human behavior, emotions become less personal. You recognize that the person insulting you was shaped by their own insecurities, experiences, fears, and social conditioning extending beyond the immediate moment. their actions become understandable rather than purely malicious. And this doesn't excuse harmful behavior, but it transforms your relationship to it. Understanding dissolves hatred because hatred depends on imagining people as freely choosing evil independent of root causes. Spinosa believed that once humans truly understood the forces shaping behavior, compassion would emerge naturally.
This perspective radically alters our concept of morality. Most traditional morality revolves around blame and punishment. People are divided into good individuals deserving reward and bad individuals deserving condemnation. Spinosa rejected this framework because it assumes humans exist outside of causality. Instead, he believed ethical life should focus on increasing understanding, cooperation, and human flourishing. A healthy society wouldn't be built primarily on fear of punishment. It would be built on knowledge of human nature and camaraderie. Imagine being caught in a violent current without understanding the ocean. You panic because events feel random and uncontrollable. But a skilled sailor who understands tides and weather patterns navigates the same waters differently. The laws of nature haven't changed or disappeared, but knowledge creates the power to shape your reaction to adversity. This is Spinosa's idea of freedom. Freedom is not existing outside of the universe's laws. Freedom is aligning yourself consciously with reality rather than fighting blindly against it. The more adequately you understand yourself and the world around you, the less you are dominated by confusion and destructive emotion. You become capable of responding rationally rather than reacting compulsively. This transformation leads towards the highest form of human existence Spininoza could imagine. A state where the ego loosens its grip entirely. where the self begins seeing reality from the perspective of eternity itself. Spinosa believed there was a way of seeing reality that could fundamentally transform human existence. He referred to it as under the aspect of eternity. Most people experience life from an intensely narrow perspective. The human mind is trapped inside immediate concerns. Personal anxieties dominate your attention. Your daily frustrations feel enormous. Social conflict becomes all-consuming. The ego interprets every event in relation to itself. Someone criticizes you and it feels catastrophic. A plan fails and it feels like the universe is collapsing around your desires. Human beings instinctively place themselves at the center of reality. Spinosa believed this limited perspective is the source of much suffering. When you identify completely with the ego, life becomes an endless emotional storm. You cling desperately to pleasure because you fear pain. You become consumed by anger because you experience obstacles as personal attacks against your existence. Fear dominates because everything appears fragile and temporary. But Spininoza argued there is another way of perceiving reality. Stepping back mentally until your individual life becomes part of a vastly larger process. You begin seeing humanity itself as one expression of nature among countless others. You see civilizations rising and falling across history. You see ecosystems evolving over millions of years. You see stars forming from collapsing clouds of gas and exploding into elements that later become living organisms. You realize your body is composed of matter older than the Earth itself. Instead of experiencing yourself as an isolated creature fighting against reality, you begin experiencing yourself as part of reality unfolding. Your existence becomes one temporary expression of an infinite process stretching far beyond individual identity. This shift wasn't meant to produce passivity or indifference. No, quite the opposite. Spinosa believed it could free people from destructive emotional patterns and allow them to live more rationally, compassionately, and joyfully. Because when you stop interpreting everything through the narrow lens of ego, hatred becomes much harder to sustain. Most hatred depends on rigid separations between the self and the other.
You see another person as fundamentally alien, threatening, or morally corrupt. But Spinosa's philosophy dissolves those boundaries. Every person becomes an expression of the same underlying reality shaped by causes extending far beyond our conscious control. The person you envy, fear, or despise is another mode of the same infinite substance that you are part of. Again, this doesn't mean abandoning moral judgment entirely or tolerating harmful behavior. Spinosa wasn't arguing that suffering and injustice are mere illusions. He understood human cruelty deeply, but he believed understanding the causes behind human behavior creates the possibility of compassion without naive. This is why Spinosa placed such enormous importance on reason. Today, reason is often imagined as cold logic detached from emotion. But for Spinosa, reason was deeply connected to emotion. The and reality, the more capable you become of acting rather than merely reacting. And this leads to one of Spinosa's most beautiful ideas. The intellectual love of God. At first, the phrase sounds religious in the traditional sense. But Spinosa means something almost entirely different. The intellectual love of God is the joy that comes from understanding reality itself. It is the emotional experience of perceiving the universe's interconnectedness clearly. It's the feeling that you get when you look up at the night sky far away from the city lights, staring up at the Milky Way, or standing before an incredibly vast mountain range, or hearing music so beautiful it temporarily suspends your inner monologue and transports you to a different world. or discovering scientific truths like the golden ratio, quantum mechanics, or string theory that explain the world in strangely unique yet beautiful ways. These experiences often produce a feeling that is difficult to describe. Awe, wonder, a strange combination of insignificance but incredible meaning and connection. The ego shrinks, but existence feels larger and more meaningful at the same time. Spinosa believed this feeling could become a stable way of relating to reality through philosophical understanding. The more deeply you comprehend the interconnected structure of existence, the more you participate consciously in the infinite whole. And this participation generates joy because your mind aligns with reality rather than resisting it. In many ways, Spininoza transformed spirituality into understanding. There are striking parallels here with eastern philosophies, even though Spinosa developed his ideas independently. In Advita Vanta, the individual self is ultimately identical with the universal consciousness underlying reality. In Buddhism, suffering emerges through attachment to the illusion of a separate ego. Daoism emphasizes harmony with the natural flow of existence rather than resisting it. Spinosa arrives at similar conclusions through rational philosophy rather than meditation or mystical revelation. And this may explain why his ideas continue feeling so modern. The more I researched him for this video, the fresher his ideas seemed to me. This sounds like the exact kind of message we need in today's world. In the centuries since his death, science has repeatedly revealed deeper layers of interconnectedness within reality. Ecology shows that organisms cannot exist independently from environmental systems. Quantum physics and spooky action at a distance shows that there are particles that can be far from each other and unconnected via space, but will still be interconnected. Neuroscience reveals how constructed yet fluid personal identity truly is. Cosmology shows that every atom in your body originated in ancient stellar explosions.
The deeper humanity looks into nature, the harder it becomes to maintain the illusion of complete separateness. Carl Sean once said, "We are a way for the cosmos to know itself." That sentence could almost summarize Spinosa's philosophy. You are not outside of the universe observing it from a distance. You are one expression of the universe becoming conscious. The thoughts occurring in your mind are a part of nature reflecting upon itself. Human awareness emerges from the same reality that produces oceans, gravity, galaxies, forests, and stars. And yet, despite the beauty of this vision, Spinosza's philosophy never replaced traditional religion in the way some enlightenment thinkers hoped. Because human beings don't live by ideas alone. Traditional religions survived not merely because they offered explanations about reality, but because they created rituals, communities, symbols, music, architecture, shared stories, and emotional belonging. They addressed grief, loneliness, mortality, and the need for collective identity. Spinosa offered humanity a breathtaking philosophical vision, but visions alone rarely satisfy the emotional needs of entire civilizations. Still, his influence quietly spread through history. He helped lay the foundations for the enlightenment, secular democracy, freedom of thought, and the separation of church and state. His insistence that people should be free to think without persecution became central to modern liberal societies. Philosophers, scientists, psychologists, and artists continued rediscovering him generation after generation. Because Spinosa offers something increasingly rare in the modern world. A way of feeling spiritually connected to existence without abandoning reason. A vision where science and awe coexist. Where humanity is neither the center of creation nor meaningless dust floating through emptiness. You are something stranger than either of those extremes. A temporary pattern within an infinite process, a fragment of the universe becoming aware of itself. And for a brief moment, through you, the cosmos opens its eyes. When Baruk Spinosa died in 1677, he left behind no church, no movement, no disciples marching through Europe carrying his message. There were no temples dedicated to his philosophy, no rituals built around his vision of the universe, no masses gathering weekly to celebrate the unity of existence. And yet, centuries later, his ideas survived while many of the authorities who condemned him faded into history. That survival says something important because Spinosa understood reality in a way that humanity can never move on from. The modern world often feels psychologically fragmented. People experience themselves as isolated individuals, disconnected from nature, from one another, and even from their own minds. Technology amplifies this feeling. Social media turns identity into performance. Consumer culture encourages endless comparison and dissatisfaction. Modern life surrounds people with stimulation while quietly eroding any stable sense of meaning or belonging. People are more connected technologically than ever before. Yet loneliness and anxiety continue rising across the world. We possess immense technological power while remaining psychologically divided against ourselves. Political polarization fractures societies into hostile tribes incapable of understanding one another. Underneath all of these crises lies the same illusion Spinosa spent his life attacking. the illusion of separateness. The belief that humans stand apart from nature rather than within it. That individuals exist independently. That nations can pursue endless self-interest without consequence. That the ego is the Spinosa offers no easy solutions to these problems. In fact, what he offers is extremely difficult.
A vision where every living thing belongs to the same unfolding process. Where understanding replaces hatred. Where freedom emerges through knowledge rather than domination. Where spirituality is found not in escaping the universe but in recognizing your inseparability from it. And this doesn't mean passively accepting injustice or abandoning compassion. Spinosza strongly believed in improving human society. He defended democracy, freedom of speech, and intellectual liberty during a period when those ideas were genuinely dangerous. He believed understanding human nature could create more rational and humane political systems. But he also believed wisdom begins when humans stop imagining themselves separate from the rest of existence. And perhaps this idea matters now more than ever because in a fragmented world, the idea that existence is fundamentally one carries enormous emotional power. You are not a disconnected observer floating through an alien cosmos. You are composed of ancient stars. Your mind emerged from the same universe producing black holes and oceans. The boundary between you and reality is thinner than you think. For a brief moment, the universe arranged itself into someone capable of asking questions about its own existence. Someone capable of wonder. Someone capable of looking up at the stars and realizing that the matter observing the cosmos is no different than the cosmos itself. You were never separate from the universe. You are the universe experiencing itself. Deos Cve Natura, God or nature. This idea that the universe and the divine are not separate beings, but one and the same. It might sound crazy at first, but honestly, the more I've learned about the universe through math, science, and code, the more that idea has started to feel strangely real. There's a certain feeling you get when you truly understand something for the first time. And it comes with this genuine sense of awe. I used to think that I wasn't a math person, like certain ideas were just beyond me. But over time, I realized the problem wasn't me. It was just the way I was taught. Most learning makes you passively consume information instead of actively engaging with it. And when you have a classroom with one teacher handling 30 students, it becomes even more difficult to fully engage with these concepts. This is why I have genuinely loved using Brilliant, the sponsor of today's episode. Brilliant was already my favorite way to learn complex topics, but they've taken it even further with their new super intelligent personal tutor for math and coding. It feels much closer to having an actual private tutor sitting right there beside you, guiding you through the lessons. It can see what you're doing. It will guide you through problems visually, draw diagrams, ask questions, and adapt to how you think in real time. And because you are constantly interacting with concepts directly, difficult subjects start feeling surprisingly intuitive. Whether it's algebra, calculus, logic, coding, or AI concepts, Brilliant makes learning feel engaging in a way traditional classrooms rarely do. You stop feeling like you're memorizing disconnected facts, and you start feeling like you are actually becoming a better problem solver in real time. I cannot recommend Brilliant enough, and this new tutor just makes it perfect for everyone, especially for beginners and for young people. To try Brilliant's new tutor for free, scan the QR code on screen or click the link in the description.
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