Category: Meta / Architecture
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The Evolution of Language: From Philosophy to AI
Notes #2.1- How Language Became a Model From the linguistic turn to the Age of Structure 1. From logic to language There is a strange continuity between a philosophy seminar in 1900 and a GPU-cluster in 2025. On one side stand Frege, Russell, Wittgenstein, Saussure, Austin, Quine, Rorty and many others, arguing about sentences, reference…
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Love and the Logic of Connection Today
Why the New Era Feels Like a Call to Connection Love as the Structural Grammar of a Changing Epoch I. When the Grammar of Explanation Reaches Its Limits For many centuries, the dominant Western mode of understanding has been interpretive. To make sense of the world meant to explain it: to divide, classify, diagnose, and…
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The Birth of the Self: Mesopotamia’s Role in Human Consciousness
How writing, law, and time created the first reflective mind — and began the universal story we all inhabit. The question of where the human self begins is rarely asked in universal terms. We tend to approach identity through cultures, religions, nations, or personal memory, but not as a structural event in the history of…
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Exploring The Shape of Time: Maya Long Count Insights
Why the Maya Long Count Enters the Story Now When I wrote earlier about Jerusalem and the winter of 2012, I mentioned the Maya calendar almost incidentally, as if it were a background detail rather than a conceptual thread. But the truth is that the reference was never accidental. I placed it there because I…
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From Interpretation to Structure: The Next Age of Understanding
When the World Sees the Architecture Behind Its Own Meanings (1000–2000 → 2000–2025 / Ages 50–60)** Every long story reaches a point where interpretation is no longer enough. For nearly a thousand years, the world lived in the Age of Interpretation, a period in which meaning was pursued through commentary, critique, and analysis. The Schism…
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En Christō: The Intersection of Humanity and Cosmos
The Epistle to the Romans and the Birth of the Micro–Macro Cosmos Paul of Tarsus stands at a unique crossroads in the history of thought — a place where Jewish covenantal imagination, Greek metaphysical order, and the emerging logic of written culture converge into something entirely new. Though remembered primarily as a religious figure, Paul…
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The Micro-Macro Cosmos: Aristotle’s Influence on Consciousness
ARISTOTLE, WRITING, AND THE BIRTH OF THE MICRO–MACROCOSMOS The idea that the human being is a “small world” and the world a “greater human” appears so frequently in philosophy, theology, mysticism, and psychology that it almost feels self-evident. We inherit it as if it were simply true — a natural way to think about consciousness…