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    "title": "Dante's Quiet Revolution",
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    "dek": "The Renaissance is not only money, trade, city-states, books, and paintings. Those conditions are tinder. Dante is the spark. By turning God from master into love, and humans from slaves into imaginative beings, poetry quietly plants modernity inside the Church itself.",
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        "heading": "Art Stops Commanding",
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            "text": "Humanism is the name of the change. Christianity asks how to serve God, obey God, save the soul, and reach heaven. Humanism asks how to flourish, how to make the most of talent, and how to make the world here and now beautiful and truthful. The revolution is a reorientation from the afterworld into the present world.",
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            "text": "The change happens through art. Greek sculpture tells a story; the viewer imagines before and after, making the body alive. Medieval Christian stained glass does the opposite. It is high, bright, blinding, and awesome. It makes the worshipper stand back. The purpose is not participation but submission before the power of God.",
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            "text": "The Last Supper reverses that posture. The table is too thin for thirteen people, so the eye completes it by imagining it extending outward. The viewer enters the room. Judas is not bluntly separated from the others; betrayal must be discovered in darkness, silver, hands, breath, neck tension, and faces. Renaissance art trains investigation.",
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            "text": "The Mona Lisa makes the rule explicit: art is alive only if the viewer engages it. Look directly and the face is neutral; move away and the smile appears. The painting does not simply sit there. It needs the viewer's motion, peripheral vision, and imagination to become itself.",
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            "text": "Raphael's School of Athens then becomes a whole civilization in fresco. Plato points upward; Aristotle points down. The spiritual and material worlds split, but both matter. Raphael inserts himself into the scene, and even inserts Michelangelo under the mask of Heraclitus. That self-insertion is Dantean. The Divine Comedy made the poet the hero of a sacred journey. Renaissance art follows by making human personality worthy of the frame.",
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            "text": "The question behind the art is theological: how did Dante make confident self-exploration possible in a Christian world? Europe is wrestling with God, with the relationship between God and humans, and with how humans can reach heaven. All of that compresses into one question: why did Jesus have to die?",
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            "text": "Augustine turns that into a culture. If humans trust themselves, use imagination, follow intuition, or love others wrongly, they become like Satan. The earthly city is self-love carried to contempt for God; the heavenly city is love of God carried to contempt of self. The medieval moral reflex is therefore suspicion of the human being.",
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            "text": "This is why Europe is paralyzed. If imagination and love are dangerous, then human agency becomes spiritually risky. Aquinas tries to repair the problem by combining Augustine's Platonic world with Aristotle's science, logic, and reason. But Augustine has been breathing through Europe for centuries. Culture is not only an argument; it is air.",
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                "excerpt": "When we deny who we are, when we submit fully to God, we can create a perfect world. We can achieve heaven. Okay? So, again, this is the very idea for the Catholic Church. Self -denial, self -negation. Okay? Now, you ca..."
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            "text": "Dante's first reversal is simple enough to sound almost harmless. God's greatest gift is freedom of the will. Humans are of God, but free of God. They can choose the lives they lead. In that sentence, the human being stops being only a slave who must submit and becomes a creature whose freedom is itself divine generosity.",
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            "excerpt": "It's a celebration of what it means to be human. Okay? So these paintings leave us with a fundamental question. All right? We can now see the radical differences between Christian art and Renaissance art. So now the que..."
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        "id": "love-teaches-god",
        "heading": "Love Teaches God",
        "time_range": "52:24-68:37",
        "summary": "Dante's theology converts crucifixion, sin, teaching, and human imperfection into an education in love and imagination.",
        "source_note": "This beat compresses Jiang's reading of Paradiso and his own classroom metaphor about a father, daughter, and dog.",
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            "text": "Beatrice's answer begins with love as knowledge. The crucifixion cannot be understood by an intellect that has not matured in the flame of love. Love is not sentiment added after reason. Love is what gives intellect empathy, imagination, and wisdom.",
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                    "excerpt": "Okay? So, let's look at this now. Let's look at this very closely. You say—this is Beatrice talking to Dante—what I've heard is clear to me, but this is hidden from me. Why God wield precisely this pathway for redemptio..."
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            "text": "God is love, and the divine light is already in human beings. When humans love others, the brightness burns brighter. Sin is not primarily legal failure; it is turning away from God and stuffing out the flame. The problem of redemption is that God cannot merely pardon humans, because then humans learn nothing, and humans cannot pay God back, because the crime was the desire to become God and destroy God.",
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                "excerpt": "All right? The godly goodness that has banished every envy from its own self burns in itself and sparkling so it shows eternal beauties. Remember, last semester we discussed the nature of God. God is love itself. There..."
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                "excerpt": "nature parted okay sometimes you could commit a sin that's so terrible the light leaves you and that's when we disobeyed God in the Garden of Eden that sin the original sin was so terrible that Adam doomed all his proge..."
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                "excerpt": "you to show mercy that's one possibility but when he does that the problem is we've learned nothing we haven't grown okay another possibility is if we figure out a way to redeem ourselves if we make amends if we give Go..."
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                "excerpt": "the power to offer satisfaction by himself we want to kill God that was the original sin we wanted to eat that fruit become God and then kill God and become God itself that's the greatest crime so how do you redeem your..."
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            "text": "Jiang's metaphor is deliberately blunt. If a daughter kills the father's beloved dog, pardon teaches nothing and punishment may teach that the father does not love her. The father wounds himself instead. The child sees the cost, feels remorse, and sees love. That is what God does in the crucifixion: not a ransom trick, but an act of imaginative teaching.",
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                    "excerpt": "eve i don't really love her it doesn't make sense that's a paradox here that's a conflict and so what i choose to do after many weeks of intense thinking is i choose to punish myself on behalf of eve okay i take a bat a..."
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                "excerpt": "so i'm going to use a metaphor to explain this idea it it's a very it's not a great metaphor but i think this will illustrate what beatrice is saying here about god let's just say i have a daughter named eve i have a fa..."
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            "id": "love-teaches-god-004",
            "text": "The same logic answers death and imperfection. God creates perfect laws, not perfect plants and animals. Human beings are stranger. The body comes from matter and dies, but the soul is breathed directly by God. Humans are dual: mortal bodies with immortal souls, fallible enough to make mistakes, divine enough to grow through love.",
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                "excerpt": "major problem is if god created us and god loves us why are we making mistakes why are we dying why are we in pain okay and this is what beatrice says you say i see that water see that fire and ear and earth and all tha..."
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                "excerpt": "law of the universe so that's perfect but not the animals and plants are perfect but your life is breathed forth immediately by the chief good who so enamors it of his own self that it desires him always okay so another..."
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            "text": "That makes imperfection a source of imagination. A perfect being cannot imagine because it cannot err. Humans err, gain experience, develop wisdom, and learn to love. Jiang's classroom example makes the point concrete: a bad teacher asks about grades, evaluations, parents, and money. A good teacher asks whether students are growing, and whether the teacher is growing with them. Love makes growth reciprocal.",
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          "excerpt": "if you look at previous medieval Christian art okay below first of all it's much more static it's much more organized there's not that much tension in the picture and what's most important is the idea of holiness you se..."
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          "segment_id": "seg-0023",
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          "time_label": "24:48",
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          "excerpt": "stands out from the rest and so that signals him as the betrayer but in da Vinci's work it's not obvious who is the betrayer everyone is afraid that he or she is the betrayer okay and then that this and what this does i..."
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          "time_label": "26:11",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "each of the faces da vinci was first and foremost an astute observer of emotions okay how emotions are expressed through the face through body tension through breathing through the eyes um the man who is who ultimately..."
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      "kind": "monologue",
      "summary": "Jiang uses The Last Supper to show Dante's theology inside Da Vinci: even entertainment claims such as The Da Vinci Code point toward Jesus' humanity, while the painting's musical and biblical structure encodes divine love and forgiveness.",
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      "confidence": "high",
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          "excerpt": "Last Supper is becomes up the basis for a very famous book called the Da Vinci Code and then and the Da Vinci Code is a very popular book no scholarship it just meant for entertainment what it argues is that Jesus did n..."
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          "start": 1723.94,
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "and foremost a human okay so this is this is interesting guys okay scholars don't really agree with this analysis but becomes the basis of the Da Vinci Code which is a really fun book all right something that scholars d..."
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          "start": 1794.18,
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          "time_label": "29:54",
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          "excerpt": "God is love. God is incapable of hating you. He will always find a way to forgive you. And if you remember from last semester, this is the very idea of the divine comedy. Leonardo da Vinci is getting this idea from Dant..."
        }
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      "kind": "monologue",
      "summary": "He reads the Mona Lisa as secretly alive: it changes as the viewer moves, proving that art exists fully only through engagement. He then turns to Raphael's papal-room frescoes as a Renaissance balance of philosophy, religion, poetry, and law.",
      "speaker_attribution": "Jiang visual analysis.",
      "confidence": "high",
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          "start": 1857.78,
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          "excerpt": "the Louvre, to stand in line just so they can spend 10 seconds to look at this picture, okay? What makes this picture remarkable is it's secretly alive. Dante spent 16 years crafting this in a way that by just talking w..."
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          "segment_id": "seg-0029",
          "start": 1922.54,
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "So what is this saying? What this is saying is the art is alive if you engage with it. Okay? Art is not meant to be blinding and awesome. It's meant to be here and now. Only if you participate in the art does it become..."
        }
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      "summary": "Jiang interprets School of Athens as a staged debate between Plato's upward spiritual reality and Aristotle's earthly science, with color, gesture, depth, and surrounding figures organizing the two realities.",
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          "start": 1997.16,
          "end": 2060.37,
          "time_label": "33:17",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "All right? So that's the very ideal of the Renaissance, open -mindedness, exploration. And holistic learning. All right. So let's look at this painting. First of all, at the very center are two figures. Plato and Aristo..."
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          "excerpt": "Okay? What he's saying is, the real world, what matters is heaven. And what Aristotle is saying is, no, what matters is down here on earth. Okay? Aristotle is concerned about earthly matters. Also, look at their colors...."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0032",
          "segment_id": "seg-0032",
          "start": 2145.6,
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "So they're splitting the two. And as you can see, there's depth to this painting. Okay? There's a sky to the back. There are these arches. And so it's extending forward. And so we're being drawn into the picture. That's..."
        }
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      "kind": "monologue",
      "summary": "Jiang argues that Raphael's self-insertion and the structure of School of Athens come from Dante: like the Divine Comedy, the painting inserts the artist into debate, celebrates human diversity, and turns self-expression into a religiously charged act.",
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          "start": 2220.88,
          "end": 2287.11,
          "time_label": "37:00",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "Ptolemy is concerned with the earth, with all reality. All right? So this is Raphael acknowledging that there are two different realities. There's the material reality, but then there's also a spiritual reality. And the..."
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          "segment_id": "seg-0034",
          "start": 2287.11,
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          "time_label": "38:07",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "This is a visual representation of the divine comedy. Because remember, in the divine comedy, Virgil and Dante are engaged in a vigorous debate about the nature of love, the nature of sin. Right? Okay? So this is repres..."
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          "excerpt": "It's a celebration of what it means to be human. Okay? So these paintings leave us with a fundamental question. All right? We can now see the radical differences between Christian art and Renaissance art. So now the que..."
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      "summary": "He moves from Renaissance art to theology, asking why Jesus had to die. Paul explains sacrifice as forgiveness for original sin, Tertullian's Trinity makes the problem harder, Origen's ransom theory says God tricks Satan, and Augustine turns that into a blueprint of obedience and submission.",
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          "end": 2496.01,
          "time_label": "40:25",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "What did God create us? What is our responsibility to God? Okay? And the last question is, how can we best worship God? Meaning, how can we best ensure our divinity? How can we best ensure that we will rise to heaven? A..."
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          "segment_id": "seg-0037",
          "start": 2496.29,
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          "time_label": "41:36",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "And because we disobeyed God, God had no choice but to banish us from the Garden of Eden. Okay? And so, why did Jesus have to come to earth and sacrifice himself? Because... Because without God, we humans can only commi..."
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          "excerpt": "time of a man named Tertullian, who lived about the second century, he argued for the Holy Trinity, which is that God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit are separate but equal. Jesus is God. Okay? Now you have a problem, thoug..."
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          "excerpt": "Right? And when she ate that fruit, she now swears allegiance to the devil. We are now slaves to the devil. We are now his property. So, the only way for God to redeem us is by ransoming us from Satan. By offering somet..."
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          "excerpt": "So, remember, it's the City of God. Augustine will say certain things. And it's really important for us to remember what he said in the City of God. Okay? The main idea is that because God ransomed us, we are now his sl..."
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      "summary": "Jiang deepens Augustine's problem: pride, love, imagination, and self-trust become paths to Satan, while self-denial and submission to God become the heavenly city. He then argues this paralyzes Europe and even the Church tries to repair it through universities and Aquinas's faith-reason synthesis.",
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          "excerpt": "Could anything but pride happen at the start of the evil will? Why did we disobey God? Why did we eat that fruit? Because we wanted to become God. So, there's an arrogance. There's a pride to us that is the essence of S..."
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          "start": 2811.54,
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          "time_label": "46:51",
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          "excerpt": "Okay? So, why are we like the devil? Why can't we trust ourselves? Because we were created out of dust. We were created out of nothing. Alright? If we're an angel, we're created by God. And therefore, we are perfect. Bu..."
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          "excerpt": "When we deny who we are, when we submit fully to God, we can create a perfect world. We can achieve heaven. Okay? So, again, this is the very idea for the Catholic Church. Self -denial, self -negation. Okay? Now, you ca..."
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          "excerpt": "One major reform are the creation of the university system. So, this is the University of Paris, which is chartered in 1200. This today is called the Sorbonne, okay? Which is the most famous university in France and in..."
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      "summary": "Jiang turns to Dante's Paradiso, reading and interpreting Beatrice. Dante's first assertion is that God's greatest gift is freedom of the will, and Beatrice reframes understanding as something matured in the flame of love.",
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          "end": 3072.66,
          "time_label": "50:12",
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          "excerpt": "Okay? He's in the air. You breathe. That's the power of culture. The man who will ultimately free Europe from the grasp of Augustine is actually Dante. And Dante will do so forever. He's going to do that for his poetry...."
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          "segment_id": "seg-0046",
          "start": 3074.04,
          "end": 3144.59,
          "time_label": "51:14",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "All right? You are of God, but now you are free of God. You can do whatever you want. All right? So, that's one of the central ideas of the Divine Comedy. That what makes us fundamentally human is freedom of the will. T..."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0047",
          "segment_id": "seg-0047",
          "start": 3144.73,
          "end": 3195.64,
          "time_label": "52:24",
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          "excerpt": "Okay? So, let's look at this now. Let's look at this very closely. You say—this is Beatrice talking to Dante—what I've heard is clear to me, but this is hidden from me. Why God wield precisely this pathway for redemptio..."
        },
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          "segment_id": "seg-0048",
          "start": 3196.5,
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          "time_label": "53:16",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "All right? The godly goodness that has banished every envy from its own self burns in itself and sparkling so it shows eternal beauties. Remember, last semester we discussed the nature of God. God is love itself. There..."
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      "summary": "Jiang continues Beatrice's reasoning: humans have freedom and love, but original sin so totally empties human dignity that neither simple pardon nor human payment can solve the problem. God must choose a path that both forgives and teaches.",
      "speaker_attribution": "Jiang reading and interpreting Dante/Beatrice.",
      "confidence": "high",
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          "start": 3267.64,
          "end": 3327.56,
          "time_label": "54:27",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "Okay? So, these are the two things that God has given us. Freedom to choose, freedom to lead the lives we want to live, as well as the power to love and to imagine. But these things come into conflict when we choose to..."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0050",
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          "start": 3327.56,
          "end": 3386.96,
          "time_label": "55:27",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "nature parted okay sometimes you could commit a sin that's so terrible the light leaves you and that's when we disobeyed God in the Garden of Eden that sin the original sin was so terrible that Adam doomed all his proge..."
        },
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0051",
          "segment_id": "seg-0051",
          "start": 3386.96,
          "end": 3450.18,
          "time_label": "56:26",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "you to show mercy that's one possibility but when he does that the problem is we've learned nothing we haven't grown okay another possibility is if we figure out a way to redeem ourselves if we make amends if we give Go..."
        },
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0052",
          "segment_id": "seg-0052",
          "start": 3450.18,
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          "time_label": "57:30",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "the power to offer satisfaction by himself we want to kill God that was the original sin we wanted to eat that fruit become God and then kill God and become God itself that's the greatest crime so how do you redeem your..."
        }
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      "kind": "monologue",
      "summary": "To make Dante's logic emotionally legible, Jiang invents a father-daughter-dog metaphor: if the daughter kills what the father loves, pardon teaches nothing and punishment risks implying lovelessness, so the father wounds himself to make remorse and love visible.",
      "speaker_attribution": "Jiang explanatory metaphor.",
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          "end": 3566.76,
          "time_label": "58:27",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "so i'm going to use a metaphor to explain this idea it it's a very it's not a great metaphor but i think this will illustrate what beatrice is saying here about god let's just say i have a daughter named eve i have a fa..."
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          "segment_id": "seg-0054",
          "start": 3566.76,
          "end": 3628.32,
          "time_label": "59:26",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "eve i don't really love her it doesn't make sense that's a paradox here that's a conflict and so what i choose to do after many weeks of intense thinking is i choose to punish myself on behalf of eve okay i take a bat a..."
        }
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      "kind": "reading-quoted-material",
      "summary": "He then follows Beatrice into the problem of corruption: if God creates perfectly, why do animals, plants, bodies, and worldly things die? The answer is that God creates perfect laws and matter, not every corruptible form directly.",
      "speaker_attribution": "Jiang reading and interpreting Dante/Beatrice.",
      "confidence": "high",
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          "start": 3628.32,
          "end": 3691.58,
          "time_label": "1:00:28",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "major problem is if god created us and god loves us why are we making mistakes why are we dying why are we in pain okay and this is what beatrice says you say i see that water see that fire and ear and earth and all tha..."
        },
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          "start": 3691.58,
          "end": 3750.96,
          "time_label": "1:01:31",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "have mentioned as well as those things that are made from them receive their form from a credit power the matter contained had been created just as within the stars that wheel around them the power to give form had been..."
        }
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      "kind": "monologue",
      "summary": "Jiang explains Dante's dual nature of humans: bodies arise from mortal matter, but souls are breathed directly by God, so human love, imagination, wisdom, and resurrection come from divine light growing through relationships.",
      "speaker_attribution": "Jiang interpreting Dante/Beatrice.",
      "confidence": "high",
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0057",
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          "excerpt": "law of the universe so that's perfect but not the animals and plants are perfect but your life is breathed forth immediately by the chief good who so enamors it of his own self that it desires him always okay so another..."
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          "excerpt": "adam god created him from out of dust okay but then what god did was breathe life into him so the essence of god is with in adam and therefore us our bodies are mortal but our souls are immortal our souls have the essen..."
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          "excerpt": "creativity in western europe all right so let's look at the similarities to understand how creativity happens in civilization okay so the first similarity is classical greece had open cooperative competition okay so ide..."
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          "excerpt": "to write in latin even though latin was the official language of the intellectual class in europe at the time he purposely chose to write in tuscan which is a local language and because he did that he made tuscan first..."
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          "excerpt": "become the basis for modernity especially the idea of individuality of humanism right what's individual an individual is someone who celebrates himself and pursues his or her curiosity to explore the world and this proc..."
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          "excerpt": "world becomes alive so the greater our imagination the more alive our imagination becomes and this idea is most visually expressed in the painting the creation of adam by michael angelo okay this is michael angelo um th..."
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          "excerpt": "imagination right now you can see god um is surrounded by his angels okay but you take them away and what do you have behind them guys this is a picture of the human brain right do you see this okay this is a stem okay..."
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          "excerpt": "you know where this painting is this painting is on the top of something called the sustained chapel in the vatican it's at the very heart of the catholic church so what donning has been able to do is destroy an empire..."
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          "excerpt": "What did God create us? What is our responsibility to God? Okay? And the last question is, how can we best worship God? Meaning, how can we best ensure our divinity? How can we best ensure that we will rise to heaven? A..."
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          "excerpt": "So, remember, it's the City of God. Augustine will say certain things. And it's really important for us to remember what he said in the City of God. Okay? The main idea is that because God ransomed us, we are now his sl..."
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          "excerpt": "Okay? He's in the air. You breathe. That's the power of culture. The man who will ultimately free Europe from the grasp of Augustine is actually Dante. And Dante will do so forever. He's going to do that for his poetry...."
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          "excerpt": "All right? The godly goodness that has banished every envy from its own self burns in itself and sparkling so it shows eternal beauties. Remember, last semester we discussed the nature of God. God is love itself. There..."
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          "excerpt": "Okay? So, these are the two things that God has given us. Freedom to choose, freedom to lead the lives we want to live, as well as the power to love and to imagine. But these things come into conflict when we choose to..."
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          "excerpt": "have mentioned as well as those things that are made from them receive their form from a credit power the matter contained had been created just as within the stars that wheel around them the power to give form had been..."
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      "temporal_scope": "Renaissance Florence account in this lecture.",
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          "excerpt": "Meaning, if you're a merchant, you can borrow from this bank. And what he will do is he will set up branches all throughout Europe in order to facilitate and underwrite European trade. And obviously, he gets a cut of al..."
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          "excerpt": "The most famous church in Florence is called the Santa Maria dei Fori. It's still there. You guys can still visit it. It's the fourth largest church in the world. It's absolutely stunning. Okay? Here's another view of t..."
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          "excerpt": "So these are some of his paintings. He is a remarkable genius. He is what we call a polymath, which means that he dabbles or he's interested in every single field of human history. He has a lot of knowledge. The science..."
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      "claim": "The printing press produces a revolution of literacy and knowledge by rapidly multiplying books and democratizing access to Plato, Aristotle, the Bible, and major Renaissance thinkers.",
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0012",
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      "claim": "Jiang presents Machiavelli not simply as an amoral strategist but as a democratic Florentine who wrote The Prince to raise political awareness in a republic.",
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      "claim": "Humanism shifts the central question from God's nature and salvation to human stories, flourishing, talents, earthly goodness, beauty, and truth.",
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      "claim": "Medieval Christian art is presented as idea-centered and submissive: its stained glass overwhelms the viewer with divine awesomeness rather than inviting imaginative participation.",
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      "claim": "Da Vinci's Last Supper forces investigation because Judas is not obviously isolated; the viewer must read faces, hands, light, coins, and bodily tension to discover betrayal.",
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          "excerpt": "the Louvre, to stand in line just so they can spend 10 seconds to look at this picture, okay? What makes this picture remarkable is it's secretly alive. Dante spent 16 years crafting this in a way that by just talking w..."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0029",
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0030",
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          "excerpt": "What did God create us? What is our responsibility to God? Okay? And the last question is, how can we best worship God? Meaning, how can we best ensure our divinity? How can we best ensure that we will rise to heaven? A..."
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      "claim": "Origen's ransom theory says humanity became Satan's property after the Fall and God redeemed humans by offering his own life, tricking Satan because God cannot truly be killed.",
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          "excerpt": "Could anything but pride happen at the start of the evil will? Why did we disobey God? Why did we eat that fruit? Because we wanted to become God. So, there's an arrogance. There's a pride to us that is the essence of S..."
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          "excerpt": "nature parted okay sometimes you could commit a sin that's so terrible the light leaves you and that's when we disobeyed God in the Garden of Eden that sin the original sin was so terrible that Adam doomed all his proge..."
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          "excerpt": "you to show mercy that's one possibility but when he does that the problem is we've learned nothing we haven't grown okay another possibility is if we figure out a way to redeem ourselves if we make amends if we give Go..."
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          "excerpt": "so i'm going to use a metaphor to explain this idea it it's a very it's not a great metaphor but i think this will illustrate what beatrice is saying here about god let's just say i have a daughter named eve i have a fa..."
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          "excerpt": "have mentioned as well as those things that are made from them receive their form from a credit power the matter contained had been created just as within the stars that wheel around them the power to give form had been..."
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          "excerpt": "law of the universe so that's perfect but not the animals and plants are perfect but your life is breathed forth immediately by the chief good who so enamors it of his own self that it desires him always okay so another..."
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          "excerpt": "So the main artwork during the medieval Christian period are stained glass windows. So you go inside a church and you see pictures on the windows. And what these are, are almost like visual aids. So when the priest is t..."
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      "moment": "The too-thin table in The Last Supper expands outward until the viewer becomes part of the picture.",
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      "why_it_matters": "It makes viewer participation concrete instead of merely aesthetic.",
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          "excerpt": "You're here to submit. Alright? So as you can see, this is a church. You can see how the light comes in. And it blinds you. Alright? And it's hard for you to really participate in the artwork. So this is the idea of med..."
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          "excerpt": "It's much too thin, right? So what your eye believes is this table is expanding outwards. And so you are part of this picture. Does that make sense? Okay. And also it's curious because clearly within this picture there'..."
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      "moment": "Judas is betrayed not by a label but by darkness, silver, and a neck too tense to breathe.",
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      "why_it_matters": "It shows how Renaissance art turns moral drama into embodied clues.",
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          "excerpt": "stands out from the rest and so that signals him as the betrayer but in da Vinci's work it's not obvious who is the betrayer everyone is afraid that he or she is the betrayer okay and then that this and what this does i..."
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          "excerpt": "each of the faces da vinci was first and foremost an astute observer of emotions okay how emotions are expressed through the face through body tension through breathing through the eyes um the man who is who ultimately..."
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      "moment": "Jesus in The Last Supper is calm because he has already forgiven Judas; the rage belongs to everyone else.",
      "source_phrase": "He's already forgiven Judas Iscariot",
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          "excerpt": "God is love. God is incapable of hating you. He will always find a way to forgive you. And if you remember from last semester, this is the very idea of the divine comedy. Leonardo da Vinci is getting this idea from Dant..."
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      "moment": "The Mona Lisa is alive only when the viewer moves with it.",
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      "why_it_matters": "It states the lecture's participatory aesthetics in its most memorable form.",
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          "excerpt": "the Louvre, to stand in line just so they can spend 10 seconds to look at this picture, okay? What makes this picture remarkable is it's secretly alive. Dante spent 16 years crafting this in a way that by just talking w..."
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          "excerpt": "So what is this saying? What this is saying is the art is alive if you engage with it. Okay? Art is not meant to be blinding and awesome. It's meant to be here and now. Only if you participate in the art does it become..."
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      "moment": "Plato and Aristotle split the world as they walk: heaven upward, earth downward.",
      "source_phrase": "they're splitting the world into two",
      "why_it_matters": "The gesture compresses metaphysics, philosophy, and visual composition into one scene.",
      "tone": "image",
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          "excerpt": "Okay? What he's saying is, the real world, what matters is heaven. And what Aristotle is saying is, no, what matters is down here on earth. Okay? Aristotle is concerned about earthly matters. Also, look at their colors...."
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      "moment": "Raphael puts himself in the painting because Dante first made the poet the hero of a sacred journey.",
      "source_phrase": "Dante makes himself the hero of divine comedy",
      "why_it_matters": "It makes self-insertion a civilizational permission structure rather than vanity.",
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          "excerpt": "Ptolemy is concerned with the earth, with all reality. All right? So this is Raphael acknowledging that there are two different realities. There's the material reality, but then there's also a spiritual reality. And the..."
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      "moment": "Dante's answer to Renaissance confidence is not technical art history; it is a new relationship between humans and God.",
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      "tone": "definition",
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          "excerpt": "It's a celebration of what it means to be human. Okay? So these paintings leave us with a fundamental question. All right? We can now see the radical differences between Christian art and Renaissance art. So now the que..."
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      "moment": "Ransom theory flips salvation into ownership: God rescues humans from Satan, but now they are slaves to God.",
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      "why_it_matters": "It exposes the obedience logic Dante will overturn.",
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          "excerpt": "Right? And when she ate that fruit, she now swears allegiance to the devil. We are now slaves to the devil. We are now his property. So, the only way for God to redeem us is by ransoming us from Satan. By offering somet..."
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      "moment": "In Augustine's blueprint, imagination and intuition smell like Satan.",
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      "why_it_matters": "This is the deepest enemy of Jiang's Renaissance: a theology that makes human creativity suspect.",
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          "excerpt": "So, remember, it's the City of God. Augustine will say certain things. And it's really important for us to remember what he said in the City of God. Okay? The main idea is that because God ransomed us, we are now his sl..."
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      "moment": "Europe is paralyzed because people are taught not to trust themselves.",
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      "why_it_matters": "It connects theology directly to civilizational stagnation.",
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          "excerpt": "When we deny who we are, when we submit fully to God, we can create a perfect world. We can achieve heaven. Okay? So, again, this is the very idea for the Catholic Church. Self -denial, self -negation. Okay? Now, you ca..."
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      "moment": "Augustine is not just an author; he is in the air Europe breathes.",
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      "moment": "God's most prized gift is freedom from Him.",
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      "why_it_matters": "This is the quiet reversal that begins Dante's overthrow of servile theology.",
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          "excerpt": "All right? You are of God, but now you are free of God. You can do whatever you want. All right? So, that's one of the central ideas of the Divine Comedy. That what makes us fundamentally human is freedom of the will. T..."
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      "moment": "Love is not emotion alone; it is the flame in which intellect matures.",
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          "excerpt": "Okay? So, let's look at this now. Let's look at this very closely. You say—this is Beatrice talking to Dante—what I've heard is clear to me, but this is hidden from me. Why God wield precisely this pathway for redemptio..."
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      "moment": "Sin is described as deliberately stuffing out the flame in us.",
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      "why_it_matters": "It turns moral failure into a vivid loss of inner divine brightness.",
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          "excerpt": "Okay? So, these are the two things that God has given us. Freedom to choose, freedom to lead the lives we want to live, as well as the power to love and to imagine. But these things come into conflict when we choose to..."
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      "moment": "Original sin is recast as wanting to kill God, become God, and then somehow pay God back.",
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      "why_it_matters": "The provocation makes the redemption paradox concrete and morally extreme.",
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          "excerpt": "you to show mercy that's one possibility but when he does that the problem is we've learned nothing we haven't grown okay another possibility is if we figure out a way to redeem ourselves if we make amends if we give Go..."
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          "excerpt": "the power to offer satisfaction by himself we want to kill God that was the original sin we wanted to eat that fruit become God and then kill God and become God itself that's the greatest crime so how do you redeem your..."
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      "moment": "The father punishes himself so the child sees both the wrong and the love.",
      "source_phrase": "I choose to punish myself on behalf of Eve",
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          "excerpt": "so i'm going to use a metaphor to explain this idea it it's a very it's not a great metaphor but i think this will illustrate what beatrice is saying here about god let's just say i have a daughter named eve i have a fa..."
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          "excerpt": "eve i don't really love her it doesn't make sense that's a paradox here that's a conflict and so what i choose to do after many weeks of intense thinking is i choose to punish myself on behalf of eve okay i take a bat a..."
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      "moment": "God creates perfect laws, not immortal plants and animals.",
      "source_phrase": "God created the laws of the universe",
      "why_it_matters": "It protects divine perfection while allowing death, change, and new forms.",
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "have mentioned as well as those things that are made from them receive their form from a credit power the matter contained had been created just as within the stars that wheel around them the power to give form had been..."
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      "moment": "The more we love, the more the divine light burns in us.",
      "source_phrase": "the more we love the more the light burns in us",
      "why_it_matters": "It states Dante's replacement for Augustine's suspicion of love.",
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "adam god created him from out of dust okay but then what god did was breathe life into him so the essence of god is with in adam and therefore us our bodies are mortal but our souls are immortal our souls have the essen..."
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          "excerpt": "myself okay i am using my tremendous imagination in order to come up with this plan in order to redeem my daughter and because of this imagination i'm developing wisdom and this light in me grows stronger all right so t..."
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      "moment": "Perfection cannot imagine; error gives humans the possibility of wisdom.",
      "source_phrase": "if you're perfect you are incapable of imagination",
      "why_it_matters": "This reverses the old theology of flaw into a source of creative power.",
      "tone": "reversal",
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          "excerpt": "myself okay i am using my tremendous imagination in order to come up with this plan in order to redeem my daughter and because of this imagination i'm developing wisdom and this light in me grows stronger all right so t..."
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      "moment": "A good teacher grows when students grow; love makes growth reciprocal.",
      "source_phrase": "if you're growing then I'm growing",
      "why_it_matters": "The teaching example grounds Dante's love doctrine in Jiang's own classroom ethics.",
      "tone": "model",
      "confidence": "high",
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          "excerpt": "inside you what the teacher who doesn't love you only cares about pleasing parents okay second difference is this if you loves you are asking are my students working hard okay because only by working hard can you learn..."
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      "moment": "A perfect storm does not matter unless a poet creates the spark.",
      "source_phrase": "create the spark to ignite your civilization",
      "why_it_matters": "This is the lecture's civilizational causality in one sentence.",
      "tone": "causal-chain",
      "confidence": "high",
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          "excerpt": "become the basis for modernity especially the idea of individuality of humanism right what's individual an individual is someone who celebrates himself and pursues his or her curiosity to explore the world and this proc..."
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      "moment": "Love is the universe's unifying force, while imagination gives life to the world.",
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      "moment": "The Creation of Adam can mean not only God creating Adam, but Adam creating God from the human brain.",
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          "excerpt": "world becomes alive so the greater our imagination the more alive our imagination becomes and this idea is most visually expressed in the painting the creation of adam by michael angelo okay this is michael angelo um th..."
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          "excerpt": "imagination right now you can see god um is surrounded by his angels okay but you take them away and what do you have behind them guys this is a picture of the human brain right do you see this okay this is a stem okay..."
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      "moment": "Dante destroys an empire peacefully through poetry, subtlety, and love.",
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          "excerpt": "you know where this painting is this painting is on the top of something called the sustained chapel in the vatican it's at the very heart of the catholic church so what donning has been able to do is destroy an empire..."
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          "start": 1997.16,
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "All right? So that's the very ideal of the Renaissance, open -mindedness, exploration. And holistic learning. All right. So let's look at this painting. First of all, at the very center are two figures. Plato and Aristo..."
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          "excerpt": "Okay? What he's saying is, the real world, what matters is heaven. And what Aristotle is saying is, no, what matters is down here on earth. Okay? Aristotle is concerned about earthly matters. Also, look at their colors...."
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "So they're splitting the two. And as you can see, there's depth to this painting. Okay? There's a sky to the back. There are these arches. And so it's extending forward. And so we're being drawn into the picture. That's..."
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      "claim": "Raphael's insertion of himself into School of Athens is read as a Dantean move: against Christian humility and self-negation, the artist re-enters the world and celebrates human curiosity.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0033",
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          "excerpt": "Ptolemy is concerned with the earth, with all reality. All right? So this is Raphael acknowledging that there are two different realities. There's the material reality, but then there's also a spiritual reality. And the..."
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          "excerpt": "This is a visual representation of the divine comedy. Because remember, in the divine comedy, Virgil and Dante are engaged in a vigorous debate about the nature of love, the nature of sin. Right? Okay? So this is repres..."
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      "claim": "The central Christian problem in this lecture is why Jesus had to die: Paul ties it to original sin and forgiveness, but the later doctrine that Jesus is God makes divine self-sacrifice conceptually puzzling.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0036",
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          "excerpt": "What did God create us? What is our responsibility to God? Okay? And the last question is, how can we best worship God? Meaning, how can we best ensure our divinity? How can we best ensure that we will rise to heaven? A..."
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      "claim": "Beatrice's answer begins by saying the crucifixion can only be understood by an intellect matured within love; for Jiang, love gives wisdom, empathy, and imagination.",
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          "excerpt": "All right? The godly goodness that has banished every envy from its own self burns in itself and sparkling so it shows eternal beauties. Remember, last semester we discussed the nature of God. God is love itself. There..."
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      "claim": "In Jiang's Dante reading, sin dims the divine light inside humans; making amends is a chosen effort to return to the proper path.",
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      "claim": "Original sin creates a paradox: if God simply pardons, humans learn nothing, but humans cannot repay a crime as great as trying to become and kill God.",
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          "excerpt": "nature parted okay sometimes you could commit a sin that's so terrible the light leaves you and that's when we disobeyed God in the Garden of Eden that sin the original sin was so terrible that Adam doomed all his proge..."
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          "excerpt": "you to show mercy that's one possibility but when he does that the problem is we've learned nothing we haven't grown okay another possibility is if we figure out a way to redeem ourselves if we make amends if we give Go..."
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          "excerpt": "creativity in western europe all right so let's look at the similarities to understand how creativity happens in civilization okay so the first similarity is classical greece had open cooperative competition okay so ide..."
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    {
      "claim": "Background conditions do not ignite civilization without a great poet or thinker: Homer plays that role for Greece, Dante for the Italian Renaissance and modernity.",
      "refs": [
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0064"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Civilizational spark model in this lecture.",
      "topic_tags": [
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        "dante",
        "civilization",
        "poetry"
      ],
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          "excerpt": "to write in latin even though latin was the official language of the intellectual class in europe at the time he purposely chose to write in tuscan which is a local language and because he did that he made tuscan first..."
        }
      ],
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    },
    {
      "claim": "The ultimate message Jiang attributes to Homer and Dante is that love is the unifying force of the universe: love is God, God is love, and love allows persons to become one another imaginatively.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0065"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Conclusion of this lecture.",
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        "god",
        "homer",
        "dante",
        "imagination"
      ],
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0065",
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          "start": 4244.4,
          "end": 4316.12,
          "time_label": "1:10:44",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "become the basis for modernity especially the idea of individuality of humanism right what's individual an individual is someone who celebrates himself and pursues his or her curiosity to explore the world and this proc..."
        }
      ],
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      "lens_points_detail": []
    },
    {
      "claim": "Imagination is the animating force of the world: by imagining the world, humans make it alive.",
      "refs": [
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0065",
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0066"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Conclusion of this lecture.",
      "topic_tags": [
        "imagination",
        "world",
        "life",
        "modernity"
      ],
      "claim_type": "model",
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        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0065",
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          "end": 4316.12,
          "time_label": "1:10:44",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "become the basis for modernity especially the idea of individuality of humanism right what's individual an individual is someone who celebrates himself and pursues his or her curiosity to explore the world and this proc..."
        },
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0066",
          "segment_id": "seg-0066",
          "start": 4316.12,
          "end": 4375.83,
          "time_label": "1:11:56",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "world becomes alive so the greater our imagination the more alive our imagination becomes and this idea is most visually expressed in the painting the creation of adam by michael angelo okay this is michael angelo um th..."
        }
      ],
      "lens_points": [],
      "lens_points_detail": []
    },
    {
      "claim": "Michelangelo's Creation of Adam can be read in two directions: God creates Adam, but Adam also creates the represented God through human imagination, signaled by the brain-like shape behind God.",
      "refs": [
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0066",
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0067"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Interpretation of Michelangelo in this lecture.",
      "topic_tags": [
        "creation-of-adam",
        "michelangelo",
        "god",
        "brain",
        "imagination"
      ],
      "claim_type": "model",
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0066",
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          "start": 4316.12,
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          "time_label": "1:11:56",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "world becomes alive so the greater our imagination the more alive our imagination becomes and this idea is most visually expressed in the painting the creation of adam by michael angelo okay this is michael angelo um th..."
        },
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0067",
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          "time_label": "1:12:55",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "imagination right now you can see god um is surrounded by his angels okay but you take them away and what do you have behind them guys this is a picture of the human brain right do you see this okay this is a stem okay..."
        }
      ],
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  ],
  "diagnoses": [
    {
      "claim": "Merchant elites such as the Medici face a legitimacy problem because they cannot claim battlefield honor or priestly divine authority, so patronage of art becomes a substitute source of status.",
      "refs": [
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0003",
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0004"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Renaissance Florence model in this lecture.",
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        "medici",
        "merchant-elite",
        "legitimacy",
        "patronage"
      ],
      "claim_type": "diagnosis",
      "confidence": "high",
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          "time_label": "2:29",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "is that because these city -states were always at war with each other, everyone was a participant in history. Remember, if you are in an imperial bureaucracy, if you're a bureaucrat, you can sort of stand outside of his..."
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      ],
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      "claim": "Jiang's own thesis is that Dante, not the background perfect storm alone, is the secret sauce that sparks the Renaissance.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0006"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Jiang's thesis in the 2025-03-25 lecture.",
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        "dante",
        "divine-comedy",
        "renaissance",
        "civilizational-spark"
      ],
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0005",
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          "end": 360.91,
          "time_label": "4:43",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "and monasteries are places of theological debate and discussion and they store the classics and this is where a lot of new ideas will come from you And then the last factor to think about is in 1440, around then, a man..."
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          "excerpt": "you the scholarly, mainstream argument, and then I will present my argument, which is that Dante is most responsible for the Renaissance, okay? So, a basic fact that we need to remember. If you look at all the major fig..."
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      "claim": "Jiang presents Machiavelli not simply as an amoral strategist but as a democratic Florentine who wrote The Prince to raise political awareness in a republic.",
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      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Machiavelli interpretation in this lecture.",
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        "political-knowledge"
      ],
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0013",
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          "excerpt": "All right? You also have Niccolo Machiavelli, who we still read today. His most famous work is called The Prince. And The Prince is really one of the first political treatises in the world. The question then is how do y..."
        }
      ],
      "lens_points": [],
      "lens_points_detail": []
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      "claim": "Jiang treats Da Vinci as an astute observer of emotion whose art turns anatomy, facial expression, breathing, eyes, and hand motion into evidence of inner life.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0024"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Interpretation of Da Vinci in this lecture.",
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        "da-vinci",
        "emotion",
        "anatomy",
        "inner-life"
      ],
      "claim_type": "diagnosis",
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0023",
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "stands out from the rest and so that signals him as the betrayer but in da Vinci's work it's not obvious who is the betrayer everyone is afraid that he or she is the betrayer okay and then that this and what this does i..."
        },
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0024",
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          "start": 1571.1,
          "end": 1649.56,
          "time_label": "26:11",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "each of the faces da vinci was first and foremost an astute observer of emotions okay how emotions are expressed through the face through body tension through breathing through the eyes um the man who is who ultimately..."
        }
      ],
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    {
      "claim": "Jiang names Dante's central intervention as a reimagining of the human relationship with God, which explains the confident self-exploration of Renaissance art.",
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      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Main thesis in this lecture.",
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        "dante",
        "god",
        "humanity",
        "renaissance-art"
      ],
      "claim_type": "diagnosis",
      "confidence": "high",
      "refs_detail": [
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0035",
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          "start": 2363.92,
          "end": 2425.5,
          "time_label": "39:23",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "It's a celebration of what it means to be human. Okay? So these paintings leave us with a fundamental question. All right? We can now see the radical differences between Christian art and Renaissance art. So now the que..."
        }
      ],
      "lens_points": [],
      "lens_points_detail": []
    },
    {
      "claim": "Augustine turns ransom theory into the Catholic Church's intellectual blueprint: because God ransomed humans, humans are now God's slaves and must distrust imagination, intuition, and self-love.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0039",
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0040"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Augustine interpretation in this lecture.",
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        "augustine",
        "catholic-church",
        "submission",
        "imagination"
      ],
      "claim_type": "diagnosis",
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      "refs_detail": [
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0039",
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          "start": 2627.5,
          "end": 2689.7,
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          "excerpt": "Right? And when she ate that fruit, she now swears allegiance to the devil. We are now slaves to the devil. We are now his property. So, the only way for God to redeem us is by ransoming us from Satan. By offering somet..."
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          "excerpt": "So, remember, it's the City of God. Augustine will say certain things. And it's really important for us to remember what he said in the City of God. Okay? The main idea is that because God ransomed us, we are now his sl..."
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    {
      "claim": "Jiang argues that asking Europeans to deny themselves and submit completely to Church power produces corruption, stagnation, and inequality, helping explain why the Islamic world raced ahead.",
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      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Civilizational diagnosis in this lecture.",
      "topic_tags": [
        "europe",
        "islamic-world",
        "stagnation",
        "church-power"
      ],
      "claim_type": "diagnosis",
      "confidence": "high",
      "refs_detail": [
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0043",
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          "end": 2939.44,
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          "excerpt": "When we deny who we are, when we submit fully to God, we can create a perfect world. We can achieve heaven. Okay? So, again, this is the very idea for the Catholic Church. Self -denial, self -negation. Okay? Now, you ca..."
        }
      ],
      "lens_points": [],
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    {
      "claim": "Thomas Aquinas tries to update Catholic thought by combining Augustine's Platonic world with Aristotelian science, logic, and reason, but Jiang says Augustine's cultural grip is too deep for this to succeed.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0045"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Aquinas interpretation in this lecture.",
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      ],
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0044",
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "One major reform are the creation of the university system. So, this is the University of Paris, which is chartered in 1200. This today is called the Sorbonne, okay? Which is the most famous university in France and in..."
        },
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0045",
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          "time_label": "50:12",
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          "excerpt": "Okay? He's in the air. You breathe. That's the power of culture. The man who will ultimately free Europe from the grasp of Augustine is actually Dante. And Dante will do so forever. He's going to do that for his poetry...."
        }
      ],
      "lens_points": [],
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    {
      "claim": "Dante frees Europe from Augustine's grasp by reimagining the human relationship with God through poetry.",
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      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Main thesis in this lecture.",
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      ],
      "claim_type": "diagnosis",
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      "refs_detail": [
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          "excerpt": "Okay? He's in the air. You breathe. That's the power of culture. The man who will ultimately free Europe from the grasp of Augustine is actually Dante. And Dante will do so forever. He's going to do that for his poetry...."
        },
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0046",
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          "end": 3144.59,
          "time_label": "51:14",
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          "excerpt": "All right? You are of God, but now you are free of God. You can do whatever you want. All right? So, that's one of the central ideas of the Divine Comedy. That what makes us fundamentally human is freedom of the will. T..."
        }
      ],
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    {
      "claim": "Jiang's final claim is that Dante peacefully destroys and reinvents the Catholic intellectual empire by using poetry, subtlety, love, and Michelangelo's art to place human imagination at the Church's center.",
      "refs": [
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      "temporal_scope": "Conclusion of this lecture.",
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        "catholic-church",
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      ],
      "claim_type": "diagnosis",
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      "refs_detail": [
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0068",
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          "excerpt": "you know where this painting is this painting is on the top of something called the sustained chapel in the vatican it's at the very heart of the catholic church so what donning has been able to do is destroy an empire..."
        }
      ],
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      "claim": "The Renaissance is defined as an intellectual revolution that combines classical Greece with Christian Europe and thereby creates the values of modernity.",
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      ],
      "claim_type": "definition",
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      "refs_detail": [
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
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      ],
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      "temporal_scope": "Definition used in this lecture.",
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        "eudaimonia",
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          "excerpt": "So these are the major thinkers. The philosophy, the value system that underpins all this artistic production is the idea of humanism. So what is humanism? And how is it different from Christianity? So these are the thr..."
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      "claim": "Da Vinci's Last Supper forces investigation because Judas is not obviously isolated; the viewer must read faces, hands, light, coins, and bodily tension to discover betrayal.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0024"
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      "temporal_scope": "Interpretation of The Last Supper in this lecture.",
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        "observation"
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      "claim_type": "evidence",
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          "excerpt": "It's much too thin, right? So what your eye believes is this table is expanding outwards. And so you are part of this picture. Does that make sense? Okay. And also it's curious because clearly within this picture there'..."
        },
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "if you look at previous medieval Christian art okay below first of all it's much more static it's much more organized there's not that much tension in the picture and what's most important is the idea of holiness you se..."
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          "time_label": "24:48",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "stands out from the rest and so that signals him as the betrayer but in da Vinci's work it's not obvious who is the betrayer everyone is afraid that he or she is the betrayer okay and then that this and what this does i..."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0024",
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          "start": 1571.1,
          "end": 1649.56,
          "time_label": "26:11",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "each of the faces da vinci was first and foremost an astute observer of emotions okay how emotions are expressed through the face through body tension through breathing through the eyes um the man who is who ultimately..."
        }
      ],
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      "lens_points_detail": []
    },
    {
      "claim": "Jiang treats the Da Vinci Code reading of The Last Supper as entertaining rather than scholarly, but still useful for seeing the painting's emphasis on Jesus' humanity.",
      "refs": [
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0025",
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0026"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Interpretive aside in this lecture.",
      "topic_tags": [
        "last-supper",
        "da-vinci-code",
        "jesus-humanity"
      ],
      "claim_type": "evidence",
      "confidence": "medium",
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        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0025",
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          "start": 1649.56,
          "end": 1723.94,
          "time_label": "27:29",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "Last Supper is becomes up the basis for a very famous book called the Da Vinci Code and then and the Da Vinci Code is a very popular book no scholarship it just meant for entertainment what it argues is that Jesus did n..."
        },
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0026",
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          "start": 1723.94,
          "end": 1794.18,
          "time_label": "28:43",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "and foremost a human okay so this is this is interesting guys okay scholars don't really agree with this analysis but becomes the basis of the Da Vinci Code which is a really fun book all right something that scholars d..."
        }
      ],
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      "lens_points_detail": []
    },
    {
      "claim": "Origen's ransom theory says humanity became Satan's property after the Fall and God redeemed humans by offering his own life, tricking Satan because God cannot truly be killed.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0038",
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0039"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Theological model as presented in this lecture.",
      "topic_tags": [
        "origen",
        "ransom-theory",
        "satan",
        "redemption"
      ],
      "claim_type": "definition",
      "confidence": "high",
      "refs_detail": [
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0038",
          "segment_id": "seg-0038",
          "start": 2560.87,
          "end": 2627.38,
          "time_label": "42:40",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "time of a man named Tertullian, who lived about the second century, he argued for the Holy Trinity, which is that God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit are separate but equal. Jesus is God. Okay? Now you have a problem, thoug..."
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        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0039",
          "segment_id": "seg-0039",
          "start": 2627.5,
          "end": 2689.7,
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "Right? And when she ate that fruit, she now swears allegiance to the devil. We are now slaves to the devil. We are now his property. So, the only way for God to redeem us is by ransoming us from Satan. By offering somet..."
        }
      ],
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      "lens_points_detail": []
    },
    {
      "claim": "Dante's first major assertion is that freedom of the will is God's greatest gift: humans are of God but free from God, able to choose the life they lead.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0045",
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0046"
      ],
      "temporal_scope": "Dante interpretation in this lecture.",
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        "free-will",
        "dante",
        "god",
        "humanity"
      ],
      "claim_type": "definition",
      "confidence": "high",
      "refs_detail": [
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0045",
          "segment_id": "seg-0045",
          "start": 3012.55,
          "end": 3072.66,
          "time_label": "50:12",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "Okay? He's in the air. You breathe. That's the power of culture. The man who will ultimately free Europe from the grasp of Augustine is actually Dante. And Dante will do so forever. He's going to do that for his poetry...."
        },
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0046",
          "segment_id": "seg-0046",
          "start": 3074.04,
          "end": 3144.59,
          "time_label": "51:14",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "All right? You are of God, but now you are free of God. You can do whatever you want. All right? So, that's one of the central ideas of the Divine Comedy. That what makes us fundamentally human is freedom of the will. T..."
        }
      ],
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      "lens_points_detail": []
    },
    {
      "claim": "Dante's values become the basis of modernity, especially individuality and humanism: the individual celebrates the self, pursues curiosity, explores the world, and creates goodness, truth, and beauty.",
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0065"
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      "temporal_scope": "Conclusion of this lecture.",
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        "dante",
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        "individuality",
        "humanism"
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      "claim_type": "definition",
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        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0065",
          "segment_id": "seg-0065",
          "start": 4244.4,
          "end": 4316.12,
          "time_label": "1:10:44",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "become the basis for modernity especially the idea of individuality of humanism right what's individual an individual is someone who celebrates himself and pursues his or her curiosity to explore the world and this proc..."
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  "glossary_terms": [
    {
      "term": "Blinding and awesome",
      "usages": [
        "Jiang's phrase for medieval Christian art that overwhelms the observer with divine mystery and discourages participation."
      ],
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0019",
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        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0019",
          "segment_id": "seg-0019",
          "start": 1203.71,
          "end": 1277.34,
          "time_label": "20:03",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "So the main artwork during the medieval Christian period are stained glass windows. So you go inside a church and you see pictures on the windows. And what these are, are almost like visual aids. So when the priest is t..."
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        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0020",
          "segment_id": "seg-0020",
          "start": 1277.34,
          "end": 1350.92,
          "time_label": "21:17",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "You're here to submit. Alright? So as you can see, this is a church. You can see how the light comes in. And it blinds you. Alright? And it's hard for you to really participate in the artwork. So this is the idea of med..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "City of God",
      "usages": [
        "Augustine's work used here as the intellectual blueprint for submission, self-distrust, and obedience in medieval Catholic thought."
      ],
      "refs": [
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0040"
      ],
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        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0040",
          "segment_id": "seg-0040",
          "start": 2689.7,
          "end": 2742.212,
          "time_label": "44:49",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "So, remember, it's the City of God. Augustine will say certain things. And it's really important for us to remember what he said in the City of God. Okay? The main idea is that because God ransomed us, we are now his sl..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Compelling and curious",
      "usages": [
        "Jiang's phrase for Renaissance art that draws the viewer into the scene and makes interpretation necessary."
      ],
      "refs": [
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0020"
      ],
      "refs_detail": [
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0020",
          "segment_id": "seg-0020",
          "start": 1277.34,
          "end": 1350.92,
          "time_label": "21:17",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "You're here to submit. Alright? So as you can see, this is a church. You can see how the light comes in. And it blinds you. Alright? And it's hard for you to really participate in the artwork. So this is the idea of med..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Creation of Adam",
      "usages": [
        "Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel painting used as visual proof of the Renaissance reversal: God creates Adam, but the represented God also emerges from human imagination."
      ],
      "refs": [
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0066",
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0067"
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      "refs_detail": [
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0066",
          "segment_id": "seg-0066",
          "start": 4316.12,
          "end": 4375.83,
          "time_label": "1:11:56",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "world becomes alive so the greater our imagination the more alive our imagination becomes and this idea is most visually expressed in the painting the creation of adam by michael angelo okay this is michael angelo um th..."
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        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0067",
          "segment_id": "seg-0067",
          "start": 4375.83,
          "end": 4441.58,
          "time_label": "1:12:55",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "imagination right now you can see god um is surrounded by his angels okay but you take them away and what do you have behind them guys this is a picture of the human brain right do you see this okay this is a stem okay..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Dual nature",
      "usages": [
        "Jiang's Dantean description of humans as both mortal bodies from matter and immortal souls breathed directly by God."
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0058"
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      "refs_detail": [
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0057",
          "segment_id": "seg-0057",
          "start": 3750.96,
          "end": 3816.94,
          "time_label": "1:02:30",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "law of the universe so that's perfect but not the animals and plants are perfect but your life is breathed forth immediately by the chief good who so enamors it of his own self that it desires him always okay so another..."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0058",
          "segment_id": "seg-0058",
          "start": 3816.94,
          "end": 3883.12,
          "time_label": "1:03:36",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "adam god created him from out of dust okay but then what god did was breathe life into him so the essence of god is with in adam and therefore us our bodies are mortal but our souls are immortal our souls have the essen..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Eudaimonia",
      "usages": [
        "The Greek term Jiang uses for flourishing or having the best possible life on earth."
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0015"
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0015",
          "segment_id": "seg-0015",
          "start": 1019.98,
          "end": 1098.83,
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "How do I have the best possible life on earth? So the Greek word is eudaimonia. So humanism is actually a return to the values and belief systems of classical Greece. Now the last major difference is Christianity. The l..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Father of modernity",
      "usages": [
        "Jiang's title for Dante, whose Divine Comedy expresses the values that become modern individuality and humanism."
      ],
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0064",
          "segment_id": "seg-0064",
          "start": 4187.63,
          "end": 4244.4,
          "time_label": "1:09:47",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "to write in latin even though latin was the official language of the intellectual class in europe at the time he purposely chose to write in tuscan which is a local language and because he did that he made tuscan first..."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0065",
          "segment_id": "seg-0065",
          "start": 4244.4,
          "end": 4316.12,
          "time_label": "1:10:44",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "become the basis for modernity especially the idea of individuality of humanism right what's individual an individual is someone who celebrates himself and pursues his or her curiosity to explore the world and this proc..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Freedom of the will",
      "usages": [
        "Dante's central gift from God in Jiang's reading: humans are created by God yet free to choose their lives."
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0045",
        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0046"
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      "refs_detail": [
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0045",
          "segment_id": "seg-0045",
          "start": 3012.55,
          "end": 3072.66,
          "time_label": "50:12",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "Okay? He's in the air. You breathe. That's the power of culture. The man who will ultimately free Europe from the grasp of Augustine is actually Dante. And Dante will do so forever. He's going to do that for his poetry...."
        },
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0046",
          "segment_id": "seg-0046",
          "start": 3074.04,
          "end": 3144.59,
          "time_label": "51:14",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "All right? You are of God, but now you are free of God. You can do whatever you want. All right? So, that's one of the central ideas of the Divine Comedy. That what makes us fundamentally human is freedom of the will. T..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Gold florin",
      "usages": [
        "Florentine gold currency treated as the prestige medium of European trade and the basis of Medici financial power."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0008",
          "segment_id": "seg-0008",
          "start": 520.26,
          "end": 584.47,
          "time_label": "8:40",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "The problem is, how do you facilitate trade, right? So for example, if England has a lot of cotton, and then France has a lot of, and then France has a lot of bananas, what if England doesn't want bananas? Well, England..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Holy light",
      "usages": [
        "Dante/Beatrice's language, as Jiang interprets it, for the divine creative principle or law that gives form without making every mortal form perfect."
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0056"
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0056",
          "segment_id": "seg-0056",
          "start": 3691.58,
          "end": 3750.96,
          "time_label": "1:01:31",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "have mentioned as well as those things that are made from them receive their form from a credit power the matter contained had been created just as within the stars that wheel around them the power to give form had been..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Humanism",
      "usages": [
        "A Renaissance value system centered on human stories, earthly flourishing, beauty, truth, and making the present world better."
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        "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0014",
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0014",
          "segment_id": "seg-0014",
          "start": 944.8,
          "end": 1019.8,
          "time_label": "15:44",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "So these are the major thinkers. The philosophy, the value system that underpins all this artistic production is the idea of humanism. So what is humanism? And how is it different from Christianity? So these are the thr..."
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          "segment_id": "seg-0015",
          "start": 1019.98,
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        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Individuality",
      "usages": [
        "The modern value Jiang defines as celebrating oneself and pursuing curiosity in order to create goodness, truth, and beauty."
      ],
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0065",
          "segment_id": "seg-0065",
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          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
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        }
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    {
      "term": "Mona Lisa",
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        "Da Vinci painting Jiang treats as evidence that art becomes alive through viewer participation."
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      "refs_detail": [
        {
          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0028",
          "segment_id": "seg-0028",
          "start": 1857.78,
          "end": 1922.54,
          "time_label": "30:57",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "the Louvre, to stand in line just so they can spend 10 seconds to look at this picture, okay? What makes this picture remarkable is it's secretly alive. Dante spent 16 years crafting this in a way that by just talking w..."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0029",
          "segment_id": "seg-0029",
          "start": 1922.54,
          "end": 1996.84,
          "time_label": "32:02",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "So what is this saying? What this is saying is the art is alive if you engage with it. Okay? Art is not meant to be blinding and awesome. It's meant to be here and now. Only if you participate in the art does it become..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Open cooperative competition",
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        "A repeated Jiang model where rival polities compete yet exchange ideas and practices, driving innovation."
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0002",
          "segment_id": "seg-0002",
          "start": 89.09,
          "end": 149.26,
          "time_label": "1:29",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "It is here to the Roman, Greco -Roman legacy. It is here to the Roman, Greco -Roman legacy. But, as the Ottoman Turks start to encroach on Byzantium territory a lot of the scholars, a lot of the major thinkers, the Byza..."
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          "segment_id": "seg-0007",
          "start": 445.215,
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          "time_label": "7:25",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "Venice and Genoa are the ones who benefit the most from this trade because they are by the coast, and they are the ones that are most strategically located to benefit from this trade, okay? And this trade, mainly slave..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Original sin",
      "usages": [
        "The Fall understood here as humanity's attempt to become God, so severe that neither simple pardon nor human payment can repair it."
      ],
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          "ref": "video:predictive-history-v6cdqjnrvlk@transcript:v1#seg-0050",
          "segment_id": "seg-0050",
          "start": 3327.56,
          "end": 3386.96,
          "time_label": "55:27",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "nature parted okay sometimes you could commit a sin that's so terrible the light leaves you and that's when we disobeyed God in the Garden of Eden that sin the original sin was so terrible that Adam doomed all his proge..."
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          "segment_id": "seg-0052",
          "start": 3450.18,
          "end": 3507.46,
          "time_label": "57:30",
          "speaker": "SPEAKER_00",
          "excerpt": "the power to offer satisfaction by himself we want to kill God that was the original sin we wanted to eat that fruit become God and then kill God and become God itself that's the greatest crime so how do you redeem your..."
        }
      ]
    },
    {
      "term": "Polymath",
      "usages": [
        "Da Vinci is used as the archetypal Renaissance polymath, combining sciences, philosophy, poetry, art, music, and other fields."
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          "excerpt": "creativity in western europe all right so let's look at the similarities to understand how creativity happens in civilization okay so the first similarity is classical greece had open cooperative competition okay so ide..."
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