Jiang rejects the idea that human nature is fundamentally benevolent and instead says humans naturally seek spiritual understanding, curiosity, exploration, trade, imagination, and answers to why we exist.
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Spiritual Understanding
Jiang rejects the idea that human nature is fundamentally benevolent and instead says humans naturally seek spiritual understanding, curiosity, exploration, trade, imagination, and answers to why we exist.
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Key Notes
Timestamped Evidence
"...believe human nature is benevolent. I believe humans naturally seek a spiritual understanding of the world. I think humans want to know why. Why..."
",000 years ago. Extremely sophisticated, complex, globalized world. So, I think that's what makes us fundamentally human. Okay? And you can say this is..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
A source-grounded reading of the episode's central claim: the Indus Valley was a peaceful trade civilization whose lost religion may survive as the Indian nostalgia for oneness, false reality, and liberation without the gatekeeper.
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