I'm confident in my compass. This is distinct from being confident in my beliefs. Chemotaxis, or how cells move up a chemical gradient for nutrition, or phototaxis moving towards or away from the light gradient. They don't "know" what is the maximal position to be in, but they move in the direction that is strongest to help them survive. I argue that this is not entirely mechanistic, that there is a sort of 'taxis of meaning' where agents move towards the highest signal that is meaningful towards them. That eternal 'search' to something is what I see in Complexity, coupled with being entangled with the environment. I see all humans doing that in some sense, but what is it? Something arch-typical in mythology and religion is the concept of 'the greatest good'. Every religion has it, I personally don't see myself aligning myself with one completely at every time. Like this taxis, I use my compass to help me find that which is most meaningful to me, trying to absorb the traits of 'the greatest good' that I find in the world. This can change moment to moment and I'm okay with that. I love the lecture series on religion by Jordan Peterson, Eric Weinstein's passion and references to his Jewish heritage even though he is not religious, Alan Watt's lectures on the Abrahamic Religions, Hinduism and Buddhism. All these are individuals that embody that trait which I want to also take on. But the spiritual practices that I align most with would likely be Taoism, Buddhism, and particularly the perspectives given by John Vervake and Jordan Hall regarding "The Religion that isn't a Religion".