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Secret History #16: The Big Bang of Greek Civilization

2025-11-06 People & Blogs
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Predictive History
Predictive History
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Homer, The Iliad, and the Origin of Western Consciousness

Explore how Homer’s epic poetry revealed the critical role of internal human conflict and forgiveness, a wisdom rooted in an ancient, holistic brain function that modern society has lost.

Short Summary

  • Ancient Greek civilization thrived due to the competitive, knowledge-focused system of the polis, facilitated by the highly efficient Greek alphabet.
  • The Iliad serves as a profound guide to human psychology, demonstrating that self-forgiveness (achieved via acknowledging others' courage) is the precondition for societal vitality.
  • Julian Jaynes' Bicameral Mind theory suggests ancient people accessed universal wisdom by interpreting spiritual "vibrations" received by the right brain, which modern materialism suppresses.
  • The lecture contrasts Homer's truthful, spiritually integrated narrative style with modern literature’s factual but meaningless focus on isolated internal struggle.

Professor Jiang argues that Homer sparked Greek civilization by capturing the essential struggle for forgiveness within the human heart. He examines the socio-political context—the rise of the polis and the alphabet—that allowed this wisdom to emerge. The lecture then contrasts the ancients’ integrated spiritual and logical worldview (the Bicameral Mind) with modern, logic-only thinking, showing how this loss leads to impoverished creativity and literature.

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Description

In this Thursday, November 6, 2025 lecture to his Beijing high school students, Professor Jiang explains how Homer gave birth to Greek civilization, humanity's creative peak. Notes and References: 1. The Iliad by Homer (translated by Robert Fagles) 2. Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind by Julian Jaynes 3. The Cosmic Serpent by Jeremy Narby 4. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy 5. To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf

Top Comments (10)

@---sin--- 2025-11-06

We're getting closer to the Monad with this one

1.3k 24 replies
@KadinYu 2025-11-06

"why have children when things are getting worse and worse? AANNNND the answer is because children is what gives us hope, children is what gives us purpose" - Prof.

1.1k 95 replies
@eye_see_uh 2025-11-06

Good morning class

931 36 replies
@reefertone 2025-11-06

Jiang Xueqin uses history to explain spirituality. That's kinda revolutionary.

626 25 replies
@spartan5536 2025-11-06

Omg, his wife reads the comments! Hi Professor Jiang's wife!

552 3 replies
@McEnomics 2025-11-06

Big Jiang Theory - Greek edition

532 5 replies
@EthanE.O 2025-11-06

Best feeling is finishing a class and seeing the next one uploaded 5 hours ago lol

339
@ivettenav 2025-11-06

"If we can forgive ourselves, we can change the world. If we can forgive others, we can make the world a better place." Thank you professor Jiang ❤

270 3 replies
@drewisanerd4U 2025-11-07

When I was a senior in college we had to read Socrates speeches about friendship. Similarly to the Iliad, the key was love and forgiveness. It really isn’t rocket science, but I think nowadays the buildup of one’s self is now being marketed just to sell products and services, which is why it all feels so artificial. Ever notice how there’s a whole section in bookstores about self help, but never any books about helping others.

152 10 replies
@neutralistrecordss 2025-11-06

´´The real battle is inside our human heart´´ That hits professor

83 1 replies

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