Jiang frames Western poetry and literature as a conflict between devil and God, good and evil, whose resolution is not surrender but self-belief and inner light.
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Western Literature
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Yeah. So that's a great question. So according to these secret societies, the truth is that when you pray, you're praying to the false..."
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A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "Yeah. So that's a great question. So according to these secret societies, the truth is that when you pray, you're praying to the false..."
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"Yeah. So that's a great question. So according to these secret societies, the truth is that when you pray, you're praying to the false..."
"So if you look at great Western literature, Homer, Dante. They were created in a time of tremendous political upheaval when great thinkers have..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Jiang begins with prediction as a disciplined loop, then turns the whole century into a religious struggle in disguise.
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...
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