Jiang uses this phrase for the perfect created order through which God generates and governs plants, animals, and material things without directly crafting each instance.
Topic brief
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laws of the universe
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Uh, okay. All right. So what this is saying, okay, is that the God's perfection, right? Does God have the time to create the..."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Uh, okay. All right. So what this is saying, okay, is that the God's perfection, right? Does God have the time to create the..."
Key Notes
The Furies' older order of sacred obligation that overrides Apollo's younger human justice.
Jiang explains that God creates the seeds and the laws of the universe rather than directly micromanaging every stone, plant, or table.
Jiang says God creates the laws of the universe and then lets those laws operate, so plants and other material creatures arise under physics, biology, and chemistry rather than through constant direct intervention.
Jiang keeps pressing that the real question is not just what makes humans special, but how such specialness could arise if the same universal laws also give rise to us.
Jiang restates his model that God creates the laws of the universe, those laws generate everything including evolution and human bodies, and human uniqueness begins only where God directly touches humans by putting part of himself into them.
Timestamped Evidence
"Uh, okay. All right. So what this is saying, okay, is that the God's perfection, right? Does God have the time to create the..."
"Right. So do you guys understand God create the laws of the universe? You understand the laws of the universe is, is what gives..."
"...you how this happened, right? Because law, God creates the laws of the universe, which then gives rise to everything, including us. We're different...."
"Yeah. But how did you, um, how did your body come into being? Does your body follow the laws of biology? Yes, it does...."
"...Yes. None of them have souls. Okay. So God creates the universe. The universe is governed by these laws that he creates, okay? The..."
"We are responsible for maintaining order and structure in the universe. One thing that you cannot do is kill your parents, especially your mother...."
"...what are you guys doing here? This goes against the laws of the universe. You should not be able to break free of hell...."
"We understand God as the immutable and unwritten laws of the universe. Okay? We don't know what they are, but they're like gravity. They're..."
"...God is perfect. He creates perfection, but he creates the laws of the universe. He creates the game, okay? That's perfect. The things within..."
"Okay, so you understand, the world, the laws of the universe are created, okay?"
"...element the most important element is the unwritten and immutable laws of the universe okay so a concept like justice so think of gravity..."
"...secret societies, and when he was able to discover the laws of the universe, well, I imagine that these men celebrated Newton as a..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Paradise first appears as receptivity rather than rank, then the lecture widens into vows, memory, resurrection, original sin, and Jiang's culminating wager that God created humanity because perfection alone cannot imagine.
The Iliad begins as a war of wills and ends as a metaphysics of love: memory is emotion, poetry is consciousness in motion, forgiveness defeats revenge, and forced perspective-switching becomes the big bang of...
A source-grounded reading of Jiang's Jesus lecture: Christianity begins as a pile of impossible doctrines, the historical Jesus is thinner and stranger, the Gospel of Thomas makes him a poet-prophet of the divine spark,...
The lecture asks where secret societies come from and answers by rebuilding Western religion as a sequence of world models: womb, war, empire, false God, inner light, and poetry as an encoded map back...
The French Revolution is not introduced as politics first.
Science begins here as a theological discipline of doubt.
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