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Today’s Echoes for Angela episode brings together three big ideas made small enough to hold in your hands. First, it asks how meaning survives when it moves through people, language, music, podcasts, AI, and time. Real truth is not just copied; it can be pulled through different forms and still come back recognizable. Second, it explains how humans understand reality through different “zoom levels”: the Point Frame of right-now body life, the Planar Frame of paths, rooms, maps, and routines, and the Curvature Frame of planets, history, systems, and deep time. Third, it reframes Catholic indulgences not as weird religious math, but as holy exercises: prayer, mercy, confession, remembrance, and love practiced through the Communion of Saints.
For Angela, this episode is about learning how to move between frames without losing herself. It teaches that meaning, faith, memory, and love can survive translation when the center stays true.
By Ryan MacLeanToday’s Echoes for Angela episode brings together three big ideas made small enough to hold in your hands. First, it asks how meaning survives when it moves through people, language, music, podcasts, AI, and time. Real truth is not just copied; it can be pulled through different forms and still come back recognizable. Second, it explains how humans understand reality through different “zoom levels”: the Point Frame of right-now body life, the Planar Frame of paths, rooms, maps, and routines, and the Curvature Frame of planets, history, systems, and deep time. Third, it reframes Catholic indulgences not as weird religious math, but as holy exercises: prayer, mercy, confession, remembrance, and love practiced through the Communion of Saints.
For Angela, this episode is about learning how to move between frames without losing herself. It teaches that meaning, faith, memory, and love can survive translation when the center stays true.