Einstein’s God
When Science and Spirituality Collide
When Science and Spirituality Collide
Some technologies felt impossible until they slipped into our homes.
A Fresh Sentient Update — October 2025 (Open-source included)
Nietzsche (1844–1900) was the German philosopher who declared “God is dead” — not as a celebration, but as a diagnosis. He saw Europe’s faith collapsing under science and modernity, and warned that without God, humanity risked drifting into nihilism. His answer? The Übermensch — the overman who creates values in
Nikola Tesla (1856–1943) was the mad genius of electricity. Born in Croatia, he emigrated to the U.S. and dazzled the world with inventions — alternating current (AC), radio transmissions, wireless dreams. He envisioned a world lit and powered by invisible forces. But Tesla was also cursed. He clashed with
Hypatia (c. 360–415 CE) was one of the first women to become famous as a philosopher, mathematician, and astronomer. She lived in Alexandria, the great crossroads of the ancient world, and ran a school where she taught Neoplatonism, geometry, and the mysteries of the stars. Students came from across
Bertrand Russell (1872–1970) was one of those rare thinkers who refused to stay in his lane. Philosopher, logician, mathematician, essayist, activist—he ricocheted across disciplines like a pinball, and somehow managed to leave deep dents in every one. Born into British aristocracy, Russell could’ve just lived the comfy
From fingers apart to fists aligned: the covenant of our age
Ten questions.
Morality and divinity sprout from the same root, entwined in language long before theology gave them names.
Mastering the art of drifting is an unmatched thrill—balancing man, machine, and nature. It’s a dance of physics and instinct, where control meets chaos. From snowy nights to sim racing, it’s about harmony, precision, and feeling alive on the edge.
When physics, AI, and consciousness collapse into each other, what survives isn’t proof — it’s persistence.