A student speculates that reality may be a divine experiment involving a perfect world and a miserable world, using the analogy of rats tested in mazes.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Maze analogy
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Maybe there's, you know, just like experiment. How about we're living in two worlds. The one world is perfect world, just what God created...."
Showing 3 evidence items
No matching evidence on this topic page.
Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Maybe there's, you know, just like experiment. How about we're living in two worlds. The one world is perfect world, just what God created...."
Key Notes
Timestamped Evidence
"Maybe there's, you know, just like experiment. How about we're living in two worlds. The one world is perfect world, just what God created...."
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.
Related Topics
How To Use And Cite This Page
This topic page is a discovery surface. For generated synthesis, cite the human-readable source reading or lens page. For Jiang-spoken claims, cite the transcript segment, source ref, and YouTube timestamp. Raw text and Markdown mirrors are fallback surfaces for tools that cannot read this HTML page.