Loved the article, especially the line "Everything in the past is better when there is no desire to look at the future". This is such a great line, it captures late stage capitalism in one sentence.
If you're interested, there's a theory in sociology called risk society (associated mainly with Ulrich Beck), that shares a lot with your article. It is one of my favorite theories because it helped me make sense of the unifying purpose of disparate insitutions of the world like media, financial markets, universities and the police.
I love to think about the future, because the future is so bright and beautiful! I’m actually excited if i think about what can happen, there are so many revelations, wondrous inventions, awesome things happening every day. We just reluctant to see the full picture, because we are not able to see further enough in time (back and forth too). How different life was just 100 years ago and where we are now, what we have! AWESOME! For example I was able to do my research (v3.0) in 52 days although it would took me decades, or would be entirely impossible if there is no today’s technology open and accessible to anybody. And so on… I could write a book about this topic :D
Please let me introduce myself:
I’m building the strongest possible case that the Biblical Exodus has a real historical core — using the latest archaeological evidence and the most plausible scientific explanations available.
I believe God operates through what I call ‘subtle providence’ — natural laws precisely timed, not magic that breaks them.
I cannot prove the Exodus occurred, but I CAN PROVE that every material precondition described in the text existed, at the time the text implies, in the locations the text names. No other chronological framework achieves this convergence.
I post every week a small digestible portion of my actual research papers.
If you would subscribe to me I would happily do the same.
Loved the article, especially the line "Everything in the past is better when there is no desire to look at the future". This is such a great line, it captures late stage capitalism in one sentence.
If you're interested, there's a theory in sociology called risk society (associated mainly with Ulrich Beck), that shares a lot with your article. It is one of my favorite theories because it helped me make sense of the unifying purpose of disparate insitutions of the world like media, financial markets, universities and the police.
How much voices like yours matter. They carry the power to create a wave that shapes the future.
I love to think about the future, because the future is so bright and beautiful! I’m actually excited if i think about what can happen, there are so many revelations, wondrous inventions, awesome things happening every day. We just reluctant to see the full picture, because we are not able to see further enough in time (back and forth too). How different life was just 100 years ago and where we are now, what we have! AWESOME! For example I was able to do my research (v3.0) in 52 days although it would took me decades, or would be entirely impossible if there is no today’s technology open and accessible to anybody. And so on… I could write a book about this topic :D
Please let me introduce myself:
I’m building the strongest possible case that the Biblical Exodus has a real historical core — using the latest archaeological evidence and the most plausible scientific explanations available.
I believe God operates through what I call ‘subtle providence’ — natural laws precisely timed, not magic that breaks them.
I cannot prove the Exodus occurred, but I CAN PROVE that every material precondition described in the text existed, at the time the text implies, in the locations the text names. No other chronological framework achieves this convergence.
I post every week a small digestible portion of my actual research papers.
If you would subscribe to me I would happily do the same.
https://greatstoryteller.substack.com/p/the-ghost-of-avaris?r=7l7g84&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web