You’ve likely heard people talk about your “chee” from time to time, usually around meditation, yoga, tai chi, acupuncture, or martial arts. The word is spelled qi and pronounced “chee.” It has deep roots in Eastern philosophy, and the idea is similar to a general life-force concept. It is not identical to Aristotle’s entelechy or Spinoza’s conatus, but all three circle the same mystery: what makes life move, strive, and unfold?
In Chinese philosophy, qi means something like vapor or vital energy. It is the subtle energy believed to animate the body and permeate the universe. In early Daoist thought, qi was connected to breath, bodily fluids, vitality, longevity, and the flow of nature. In that sense, qi is not merely “energy” in the modern physics sense. It is more like the felt life of the world: breath becoming motion, matter becoming vitality.
Today, qi is used in many ways tied to health, balance, and the body’s internal flow. In tai chi and qigong, it is cultivated through breath, movement, and attention. In everyday spiritual language, it often means your inner energy, your vitality, or your centeredness.
A similar idea appears in Aristotle’s entelechy from ancient Greece around the same era. Entelechy is the idea that a thing realizes its built-in potential: the acorn becoming the oak, the eye fulfilling itself by seeing. Both try to explain why life is not just dead matter.
Spinoza’s conatus is another Western cousin idea. It has a similar intuition: every existing thing strives to continue in its being. Qi is life as flowing vitality. Entelechy is life as unfolding purpose. Conatus is life as persistent striving. Put together, they show something beautiful: across cultures, life is not passive. Life pushes, unfolds, and persists.