Jiang's Dantean alternative defines the divine spark as the soul itself, not a small light inside the person, and treats the soul as an electromagnetic-like field extending around the self across dimensions.
Topic brief
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Dimensions
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A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "to spend my own my life and like i can't explain the process and that's why i think that what's happened here is that..."
Key Notes
Jiang extends this framework to say telepathy and even telekinesis become possible to some degree if people project outward through fields across dimensions.
His final picture is two-dimensional: body and soul are combined on earth, but after death the body can vanish while the soul retains bodily semblance in a spiritual mode.
In answering the Macbeth question, Jiang says the soul exists in multiple dimensions at once, so wrongdoing does not simply teleport a person into one fixed afterlife location but intensifies particular aspects of the soul, including demonic ones.
Jiang closes the sequence by restating that Dante implies a unified cosmos in which persons remain connected to one another across dimensions rather than isolated in sealed moral compartments.
Jiang links the possibility of demonic possession to a broader model in which the soul can exist across different dimensions and sinful action can trespass into those dimensions.
Jiang says the soul is infinite and exists in multiple dimensions at once, while ordinary human attention is trained to fixate on the here and now.
Jiang says each person's present life is only a small fragment of a larger total reality spread across multiple dimensional alignments of the self.
Timestamped Evidence
"to spend my own my life and like i can't explain the process and that's why i think that what's happened here is that..."
"...real soul okay um and the soul doesn't exist in our dimension exists in different dimensions all right um and we also know from..."
"...um if you believe though that we actually exist in different dimensions and we have uh morphic fields okay so so basically we project..."
"...right? Okay? So, but you need to understand, like, imagine two dimensions, okay? Your body is existing on one dimension, your soul is existing..."
"...really important to understand is that your soul exists in infinite dimensions so your soul exists at in hell purgatory and having the same..."
"...so not only are you do exist among like amongst different dimensions but you're also connected to everyone else okay if that makes sense..."
"...you have to think that the soul can exists in different dimensions and when you do anything whether it's virtuous or whether it's sinful..."
"...to understand that you need to also believe in the infinite dimensions of the soul and the fact that the soul across it exists..."
"...what i mean by that is that it's existing in different dimensions all at once so you think that all that you see before..."
"...happening is that your soul is infinite it travels across multiple dimensions right so what's happening is that depending on the dimension your alignment..."
"...happened is that by killing them, they've gone on to other dimensions to learn wisdom, to become strong and beautiful. And so what Jacob..."
"But never ever question me. Alright, um, this is actually an important story, okay? So, Amber, can you read it please?"
Relevant Lectures And Readings
A source-grounded reading of a long Dante seminar that starts with a student dreaming of a tree across water and ends by redefining Purgatory as democratic hope, free will, dangerous guidance, prayer for the...
A source-grounded reading of a five-hour hybrid workshop that begins with Macbeth and ends by turning Purgatory, free will, tragedy, envy, and generosity into one model of human transformation.
Jiang turns late Inferno and early Purgatorio into a struggle over imagination itself.
The late cantos become Jiang's sharpest Dante claim so far: faith is not obedience but imagination that helps make truth real, hope is the arrogant wager that exile and persecution can still bear fruit,...
A source-grounded reading of Jiang’s lecture on Jewish history, Sabbatai Zevi, and Jacob Frank: Jerusalem begins as an imperial hinge, exile becomes a crisis of faith, and Frankism turns sin, story, money, secrecy, and...
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