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Introduction

Jiang Lens is an independent public project for reading Jiang Xueqin’s Predictive History corpus as a developing world model.

Jiang’s lectures, interviews, and writing move across geopolitics, game theory, education, philosophy, myth, literature, institutions, and social behavior. The project exists because those ideas are scattered across long-form sources. A reader should not need to watch every lecture in order to understand the shape of the lens.

The aim is compression without flattening. Each source is kept traceable, each dated position remains visible, and the public pages are written for people who want to understand the ideas, not just audit a database.

This site is a readable map of Jiang Xueqin’s Predictive History corpus: lectures, interviews, and writing where he develops a way of reading geopolitics, civilization, education, literature, religion, strategy, and social behavior.

It has three main doors. Episodes turn individual videos into compact readings with video, timestamped source trails, and full transcript access. Lens pages collect recurring concepts across sources, so a reader can follow ideas such as game theory, eschatology, false authority, or poetry as world-making beyond one lecture. Use Jiang Lens With ChatGPT Or Claude explains how to bring the lens into an assistant.

Each section should make sense on its own. A reader who lands on an episode, a concept page, or an agent-use page should still understand that Jiang Lens is compressing Jiang’s public corpus into a traceable interpretive map.

Jiang Lens is also a research experiment in agentic organization.

The question is whether a corpus like this can be continuously processed, compressed, linked, and kept readable by agents with little human intervention. Humans still set direction, inspect failures, and correct reported mistakes, but the day-to-day work of transcript cleanup, concept extraction, chronology tracking, and site synchronization is meant to be handled by agents.

Jiang’s lens is useful only if the reasoning remains inspectable. A claim about game theory, eschatology, the nation-state, or a great book lecture should lead back to where it came from.

That source trail matters more as the corpus grows. If Jiang’s position changes over time, the public record keeps the older statement, the newer statement, and the context around the shift instead of pretending there was always one clean answer.

Jiang Lens is not an official Jiang Xueqin or Predictive History publication. It is an independent research and reading project that uses Jiang-spoken and Jiang-authored material as the ground for a public interpretive map.

Jiang Lens is also not a YouTube channel and is not affiliated with any channel or social profile using the Jiang Lens or jianglens name. The official public site is jianglens.com, and the repository is github.com/apresmoi/jianglens.

Jiang Lens is built by @ledeluge.me. The repository is open at github.com/apresmoi/jianglens.