It reads as an old person. And i think there is actually a lot of a text at the end that suggests that this is an old person who has grown weary with the things that used to excite them. I saw that all deeds are done under the sun, and see, all is vanity, meaningless and chasing after wind. What is crooked cannot be made straight. What is lacking cannot be counted. God has given human like has just made human beings unhappy. There's nothing to do about that. You can't fix that. Or at least there's a way to oaddress the situation, but you can't fix what's crooked. Yes. It does seem to me that this
David and Tamler dive into the book of Ecclesiastes, an absurdist classic that is somehow also a book of the Bible. Is everything meaningless, vain, and a chasing after the wind? Are humans just the same as animals? Are wise people no better off than fools? Will God judge us after we die, rewarding the good people and punishing the shit-heels? What if there is no afterlife and this is all we get? How should we deal with our pointless, unjust existence? Plus we return to our opening-segment bible— Aeon—and talk about an argument for replacing jealousy with...wait for it…compersion.
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