Why the Human Mind Divides Everything Into Light and Dark
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概要
Since the dawn of human awareness, we have sensed that the world is organized around a tension — light and darkness, order and chaos, safety and danger. But why have so many cultures across so many ages reached for the same language of duality to describe the deepest nature of reality?
In this episode, we journey through three ancient answers to that question.
We begin in the Persian landscape of Zoroastrianism, where the cosmic struggle between Ahura Mazda and Angra Mainyu first took shape as a theology of light and destruction. We move into early Christianity, tracing the gradual development of the Adversary, the fallen morning star, and the moral battle within the human heart. Then we arrive in ancient China, where the Tao Te Ching offers something unexpected — a vision of Yin and Yang not as enemies, but as complementary forces forming a perfect whole.
Three traditions. Three visions of duality. One ancient question about the nature of existence.
First Beliefs explores the sacred histories, lost traditions, and spiritual philosophies that shaped the ancient world — and still echo through our lives today.