Language and Understanding
Communication succeeds when a message is understood—not when every rule is followed. Latin was simple: one letter, one sound. Modern languages lost that clarity through history and conquest. Reforming spelling and grammar could bring it back.
For 2,000 years, Christianity added rigid rules, often entrenched by society. Even Constantine’s adoption of Christianity created a second power that may have weakened Rome. True progress—Galileo, Bruno, Descartes—happened despite dogma , not because of it.
Some biblical lessons fail practical sense. Christ’s refusal to wash his hands might seem moral, but in a time without antibiotics, hygiene was crucial. The Pharisees were actually protecting health. Romans survived unsanitary conditions through resilience, not ritual.
Complex rules, rituals, and language are not signs of “high culture.” They often control, divide, and hide knowledge. Language should serve people, not authority.
Clear, simple, understandable language is evolution. It restores common sense, helps us communicate, learn, and live safely.
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