From William Lily’s Rudimenta Grammatices to Geoffrey Hinton’s neural networks, this essay traces five centuries of inquiry into language — from moral discipline to scientific method to artificial intelligence — and asks why linguistics, the study of language itself, never solved the question that machines finally answered.
For centuries, religion has offered meaning and comfort, but also control. Today many still hunger for faith, yet find the old stories impossible to believe. This short reflection asks whether we can keep what was best in religion — compassion, courage, and care — without pretending to accept what no longer persuades reason. It argues that meaning, not miracle, must become the new ground of faith.
For two thousand years, the West has lived inside a sacred dream — the story of divine redemption. Yet the man who inspired it, Jesus of Nazareth, spoke not of metaphysical rescue but of inner change. This essay distinguishes between Jesus the teacher and the Christ of theology, tracing how faith became power and how its original insight can still guide a new awakening.