Atlas University Podcast
This book explores the life and funerary legacy of Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of China, through a theological and political lens. It argues that his vast mausoleum and the Terracotta Army represent a grand "mortality rebellion," where the emperor attempted to carry his earthly standardization and absolute command into the afterlife. Central to this study is the symbolism of mercury, which functioned as a toxic counterfeit to the biblical "river of life," creating an underworld empire of poisonous brilliance rather than true resurrection. The sources contrast the emperor’s pursuit of mineral immortality and bureaucratic control with the biblical promise of life through humility and divine grace. Ultimately, the narrative frames the emperor's tomb as a universal warning against the imperial impulse to absorb the cosmos into a system of human administration. By examining alchemical elixirs and the construction of a subterranean state, the text illustrates the tragic irony of a ruler who conquered the world but remained enslaved to death.
300 episodes
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