I think a lot of people have heard of Plato's Republic or the cave analogy or the myth of Earth, but they don't really have a ton of context as to who Plato was, why he did what he did.
And so I want to start kind of at a super baseline level because I think a lot of people, you know, have heard of Plato's Republic or the cave analogy or you know, the myth of Earth, but they don't really have a ton of context as to who Plato was, why he did what he did.
It's the it's a sign of of knowledge, right. But it's not full knowledge and think of it for the Greeks. All, well, I mean, you can say something like this. All energy, all heat, all fire on the earth is ultimately derived from the sun. Right. Okay. So he's looking for the source of that fire. Right.
theories of the inevitability of human evolution or of existence on earth. And there's the
Gaia, James, Lovelock theory that, you know, the earth is somehow like super resilient. And so like,
we might come and go, but that, you know, the earth will always sort of come back. And then there's
like you wouldn't have a habitable earth, doesn't point towards like, oh, you had like a million
It shows up and it's like this sort of like earth sustenance kit. And we're not seeing the aliens.