Statius can go to heaven because he wants to improve and admit flaws in his understanding; Virgil cannot because he refuses that introspection.
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Introspection
The interview starts with the end of the world and Satoshi Nakamoto, but the deeper line is Jiang's theory of front men.
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"...understanding of the world is flawed and he needs to undergo introspection, reflection, to improve himself. Virgil is not. Does that make sense? All..."
"...are we here what what is our purpose and their deep introspection is what leads to the tremendous creative output um so that's the..."
"...means is now you have a chance to focus more on introspection, on reflection, on family, on asking yourself, what makes me happy? What..."
"...I think the third one was the inner assurance and self -introspection. You've spoken about the first two in particular and how they sort..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
The interview starts with the end of the world and Satoshi Nakamoto, but the deeper line is Jiang's theory of front men.
The lecture names the law of proximity: people and nations play many games at once, but the nearest game is the one that governs action.
Jiang starts with his own formation story: a bullied immigrant reader, Yale disillusionment, depression, poker, game theory, and then a predictive method that treats society as a game played by distinct personalities.
The Divine Comedy does not defeat Virgil by denouncing him.
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