Jiang's phrase for the non-clock duration of soul-work in Purgatory: the time required for cleansing, meditation, and relearning.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
emotional time
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "time and space to just uh to um see reality or like to percept reality right did we create time and purgatory to accept..."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "time and space to just uh to um see reality or like to percept reality right did we create time and purgatory to accept..."
Key Notes
In response to a student's question, Jiang says the time of Purgatory is not primarily physical clock time but emotional time: the soul has to serve the duration required to unlearn itself and become teachable again.
Jiang interprets this as a distinction between physical time and emotional time: what binds the soul emotionally matters more than noticing the sun's progress.
Timestamped Evidence
"time and space to just uh to um see reality or like to percept reality right did we create time and purgatory to accept..."
"...a clock and you wait 10 000 years it's really about emotional time so basically it's like you're meditating and you made you're meditating..."
"of time right you have a question about time what does dante say right so but what does he mean right we had a..."
"...emotions that binds okay all right so what matters is the emotional time as opposed to the physical time okay keep on going"
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Jiang turns late Inferno and early Purgatorio into a struggle over imagination itself.
Related Topics
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