Meaning-Making
Psychologist Steven J. Heine suggests we might better be called "Homo significativa"—meaningful man—because we exist within an ecology of meaning.
Unlike other animals that approach their environment purely for survival needs, we wrap everything in layers of subjective meaning. These meanings form complex frameworks—what psychologists call schemas or worldviews—that connect events, ideas, and relationships into webs of significance. From what your job means to you to how you interpret world events, these meaning frameworks shape how we understand our lives.
We constantly build and refine these mental models, seeking to create accurate simulations of our reality. This meaning-making capacity isn't just incidental to human experience—it's fundamental to our pursuit of a meaningful life.