The student's answer to Fucci's rage is that a thief may feel unjustly punished because from inside the act he does not perceive the full scale of the damage he has caused.
Topic brief
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Fucci
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Why does he hate God so much? He curses God, right? And he's, I see the only person we seen in front of that..."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Why does he hate God so much? He curses God, right? And he's, I see the only person we seen in front of that..."
Key Notes
The thief's self-understanding may minimize the act while it is being committed, but Jiang says Fucci is enraged because he experienced the theft as a perfect crime that only God disrupted.
Timestamped Evidence
"Why does he hate God so much? He curses God, right? And he's, I see the only person we seen in front of that..."
"So we said before that the effects of theory is so big on society, but it is kind of one of those crimes that..."
"Okay. Um, why don't you think it's a bad thing or it's not that you think,"
"don't think it's a bad thing, but how you, when you do it, you probably don't realize how bad it is. Like we've had..."
"He's pretty ecstatic, man. Okay. Right. Because not only has he gotten away with it, but now he's completely innocent. Do you understand? So..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
A source-grounded reading of Jiang's central claim: late Inferno is where private vice hardens into social design.
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