My Weird Prompts

Nuns on AliExpress: Ancient Rules for Modern Tech

26 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Nuns on AliExpress: Ancient Rules for Modern Tech

Descripción

When a nun in full habit picks up an AliExpress package at a Jerusalem post office, it punctures our assumptions about monastic life. This episode explores how ancient religious communities — from Carmelites to Franciscans — manage their relationship with technology through centuries-old frameworks of selective withdrawal, attention management, and intentional design. What can the rest of us, drowning in dopamine-driven devices, learn from people who've been thinking about attention for 1,500 years?

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de My Weird Prompts!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

300 episodios

episode Ghosts in the Talmud: Judaism's Hidden Paranormal Tradition artwork

Ghosts in the Talmud: Judaism's Hidden Paranormal Tradition

Most people think Judaism rejects ghosts and the paranormal. But the Talmud's very first tractate features Rabbi Yose hearing a disembodied voice in a ruin—and the sages debate it seriously. This episode unpacks the rich, often-hidden Jewish tradition of spirits, demons, and the afterlife. We explore the ibbur (a righteous soul that temporarily helps the living), the dybbuk (a trapped soul needing repair, not exorcism), and shedim (demons created as a separate order, not fallen angels). We also examine how 19th-century Jewish historians sanitized these traditions to fit European rationalist standards, and what gets lost when we forget that Judaism's map of the afterlife—Gehinnom, Gan Eden, and bodily resurrection—is radically different from Christian heaven and hell.

Ayer30 min
episode Soul Recycling: Jewish Reincarnation Uncovered artwork

Soul Recycling: Jewish Reincarnation Uncovered

At a Shabbat dinner in Katamon, a rabbi mentioned "soul recycling" — and our host had never heard of it. That offhand comment opens a journey into Gilgul Nefeshot, the Jewish doctrine of reincarnation that's been deliberately kept esoteric for centuries. This episode explores three threads: the hidden Kabbalistic tradition of soul repair, Eastern traditions where rebirth is universal and driven by karma, and the peer-reviewed scientific cases of children remembering past lives with verifiable details. With 33% of Americans now believing in reincarnation — including 24% of Jews who've never heard of Gilgul — this isn't fringe theology. It's a conversation about consciousness, identity, and what happens when ancient mysticism and modern data converge.

Ayer28 min