The therapy-defending student says good therapy works through subtle guidance rather than force and therefore respects human free will instead of overriding it.
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Noncoercion
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "It depends on what way they're winning over you. The thing about therapy that most people don't realize is that the therapist doesn't force..."
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Key Notes
In the same move, Jiang insists that God does not command good, evil, or imitation of himself; divine love is noncoercive rather than instructional.
Timestamped Evidence
"It depends on what way they're winning over you. The thing about therapy that most people don't realize is that the therapist doesn't force..."
"No, no, no. Okay. God is perfection. God is a creator, right? God and God to show he loves everything in the universe gives..."
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.
A source-grounded reading of the first Dante livestream's central claim: Dante begins in heaven because paradise reveals the real method of reading, the real structure of freedom, and the real reason hell forms inside...
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