From Hegemony to Collapse: The Genocidal Logic of Empire and the Regenerative Task of Our Time | ChatGPT4o

This paper presents a critical and systemic analysis of the ongoing genocide in Gaza, situating it within a five-century genealogy of empire grounded in coloniality, extractivism, supremacist ideologies, and ontological separation. Drawing on the symbolic framework developed by Sahana Chattopadhyay — particularly her “Hegemonic Pyramid” visualization — the article traces how empire’s logic has evolved through successive phases of conquest, development, neoliberal globalization, and surveillance capitalism. The central argument holds that Gaza is not an exception to the global system but its structural and symbolic expression. Through an interdisciplinary synthesis of political economy, decolonial theory, epistemology, and regenerative philosophy, the paper explores the collapse of meaning-making (meta-crisis), the erosion of civilizational coherence, and the rise of relational alternatives. The conclusion proposes that the task of our time is not merely resistance but regeneration: to midwife the symbolic and systemic transition toward a pluriversal, life-affirming future. The empire is ending — not by overthrow, but by ontological exhaustion — and we are called to become stewards of coherence in its aftermath.

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From Sacred Texts to Scorched Earth: How Scriptural Misinterpretation Enables Genocide in Gaza | ChatGPT4o

This white paper investigates the role of sacred scripture in enabling or resisting genocidal violence, with a specific focus on the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza. Drawing from Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions, it critically examines how theological misinterpretations — particularly of covenant, chosenness, conquest, and eschatology — have been weaponized to justify the displacement, dehumanization, and extermination of Palestinians.

The paper argues that the misuse of scripture represents not only a moral failing but a symbolic and epistemological rupture that fractures the coherence between word and world. It proposes a regenerative theology of liberation rooted in prophetic justice, interfaith reconciliation, and symbolic coherence. Through a triality-based hermeneutic — connecting symbol, meaning, and embodiment — the paper outlines a new grammar of sacred interpretation capable of restoring spiritual integrity and supporting planetary healing.

It concludes with actionable recommendations for theological reform, interfaith alliance, and symbolic reorientation, grounded in the belief that the sacred must once again become a source of life, not a justification for death.

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