In an age of acceleration, it is easy to feel overwhelmed by civilisational fragility and ecological strain. Yet the decisive question may not be whether history declines, but whether individuals maintain their orientation toward reverence and responsibility. Even small acts of care — leaving a place better than we found it — become expressions of fidelity in a high-energy world.
A retelling of twenty foundational Greek myths, read not as entertaining fables but as early attempts to understand the origins of civilisation itself. From chaos and creation to law, hubris, restraint, and social order, these stories reveal how ancient cultures grappled with power, responsibility, and the fragile balance between destruction and meaning. Read alongside parallel narratives from the Bible, they suggest that the struggle to build and preserve civilisation is a shared human concern — one that transcends time, religion, and geography.
A historical reflection on how Christianity once shaped a unified Mediterranean world, how Islam transformed the East, and how centuries of tension reshaped Europe. The article argues for a renewed moral centre today—not doctrinal, but rooted in mutual respect and the ethical core of Jesus’ teaching.
A reflective exploration of why humans are both aggressive and endlessly self-questioning. Drawing on evolutionary inheritance, mythic imagination, and the possibility of ancient genetic engineering, this piece asks what it means to be a species that not only acts, but wonders why it acts.
A study of Waugh’s estrangement, his critique of modernity, and his uneasy kinship with Orwell — two men who saw the decay of English order from opposite moral poles.
Are humans naturally exploitative, or do we learn domination from culture? This essay traces the roots of exploitation from evolution to empire and argues that individual virtue must be joined to collective
A reflective essay on the Last Supper as a farewell rather than the founding of a religion. Jesus underestimated the power of the social construct that sustains civilisation — and, like prophets before and after him, paid the price for his honesty.


