TLDR: In this exploration of the "veil of thoughts," Alan Watts dissects how abstract conceptual thinking creates a false relationship between humans and money, work, and civilization. Rather than engaging directly with the tangible reality of economic life, modern society operates through layers of intellectual abstraction—currency, debt, status—that obscure authentic experience. Watts suggests that civilization itself perpetuates this veil, framing "progress" as an abstract goal rather than a present reality, and examines how this disconnect affects our capacity for genuine living and presence.
What Is the "Veil of Thoughts" in Money?
Alan Watts begins with a fundamental observation: money itself is a veil of thoughts. It is not a concrete thing you can eat, wear, or directly use. Money is an abstraction—a symbol system designed to facilitate exchange. Yet modern civilization treats money as if it were the actual wealth itself, forgetting that wealth originally meant real goods, real shelter, real nourishment.
When you work for money, you are not directly producing food, clothing, or shelter for yourself and your community. Instead, you perform labor in exchange for symbolic tokens that represent these goods. This creates a psychological distance between effort and outcome. You do not see the direct result of your work. You do not harvest grain or build a house with your hands and know immediately that you have created security. Instead, you receive a paycheck—itself a symbol, often merely numbers in a bank account, another layer of abstraction.
This abstraction is not inherently problematic, but Watts argues that when a civilization loses awareness that money is an abstraction, it begins to treat the symbol as reality. People sacrifice genuine present experience—time with family, creative pursuits, simple pleasure in direct activity—in pursuit of more money. They confuse the symbol with the thing it represents. The veil becomes invisible, and people believe they are working toward real wealth when they are actually chasing a thought.
How Does Civilization Use This Abstraction to Control Progress?
Watts extends this insight to how civilization frames "progress." Progress itself is an abstract concept, a veil of thought. Civilization teaches that you should always be working toward something in the future—more money, higher status, greater security—rather than being present to what is actually happening now. This future-orientation justifies endless labor and postponement of genuine living.
The problem, from Watts' perspective, is that this abstract notion of progress is never satisfied. There is always more to achieve, always another rung on the ladder. Wealth accumulates, yet the wealthy continue to pursue more. Status rises, yet the ambitious continue climbing. The goalposts perpetually shift because progress is not a destination but an ideology. It is a veil of thought that keeps people in motion without ever arriving.
Civilization sells the idea that things are getting better, that tomorrow will be superior to today if you work hard enough. But Watts suggests this is a collective hallucination. The present moment is where life actually occurs. The future is only ever imagined, planned for, worried about—but never actually lived. By tethering meaning to an abstract future notion of progress, civilization systematically deprives people of presence and immediate satisfaction.
What Is the Connection Between Abstract Work and Alienation?
When Watts speaks of money and work within the context of the veil of thoughts, he is describing what later philosophers called alienation—but his framing is distinctly his own. Most people in modern economies do not control their labor. They do not choose what they make, how they make it, or why. They are cogs in vast systems of production, exchanging time for money.
Watts' insight is that this arrangement becomes invisible when mediated by abstraction. If you were directly aware that you were giving your life energy—your actual lived time—to an employer in exchange for symbolic tokens, you might question it more frequently. But the abstraction of "salary," "benefits," "career," and "job" makes the exchange seem normal, even attractive.
The veil of thoughts allows civilization to present this arrangement as natural, even desirable. "Get a good job," society says, without acknowledging that this means trading hours of your finite life for money you may not even directly handle (it appears in an account, a further abstraction). The dignity and meaning historically found in craftsmanship, in making something complete and useful with your hands, is replaced by fragmented labor toward abstract corporate ends.
How Does Present Awareness Challenge These Abstractions?
Watts does not argue that money or economic systems should be abolished. Rather, he suggests that the moment you become conscious that money is a thought, an agreement, a convention—the moment you lift the veil—your relationship to it changes. You can use money intelligently without being enslaved to it. You can work without believing that work is the purpose of life.
The antidote is presence and awareness. When you truly understand that progress is an abstraction, you can release the frantic orientation toward the future and discover that what you are actually seeking—peace, security, joy, meaningful activity—can be found in the present. This does not mean quitting your job or refusing to engage in economic life. It means engaging from a place of consciousness rather than automatic compliance with the veil of thoughts.
Watts suggests that civilization has become so abstract, so removed from direct experience, that people have lost the capacity to see clearly. They mistake symbols for reality, plans for actual living, and imagined futures for genuine well-being. The veil of thoughts is so pervasive that it shapes perception itself.
What Would a Conscious Relationship With Money Look Like?
If you dissolved the veil of thoughts about money, you might work not to accumulate symbolic wealth but to engage in meaningful activity. You might earn what you need and allocate your time to what genuinely interests you. You might recognize that security comes not from ever-larger bank balances but from relationship, community, health, and presence.
This is not naïve idealism about rejecting capitalism. Rather, it is a recognition that the veil of thoughts—the collective agreement to treat symbols as reality and abstract future-orientation as more important than present experience—can be seen through. Once seen through, it loses its grip on behavior.
Watts does not provide a blueprint for alternative economic systems in this discussion. Instead, he points to the psychological mechanism by which modern civilization maintains control: through layers of abstraction that distance people from direct awareness of what they are actually doing and why. The veil of thoughts is not a conspiracy but a collective hallucination that becomes visible the moment you look directly at it.
Where to Go From Here
The central practice Watts invites is simple: become aware. Notice when you are thinking about money rather than using it, when you are working for an abstraction rather than a tangible result, when you are sacrificing present experience for an imagined future. Notice how civilization continually re-abstracts reality—converting experience into concepts, moments into metrics, life into goals.
This awareness itself is the beginning of freedom. You cannot change your relationship with money, work, and civilization without first seeing how abstraction shapes that relationship. The veil of thoughts persists only when it is invisible. The moment you see it clearly, you have choice. You may continue in the same patterns, but now consciously rather than automatically. Or you may experiment with living less mediated by abstraction, more rooted in direct experience and genuine present engagement.



