The Destiny of Man Beyond Empires
History is a restless theatre where kings rehearse their victories before vanishing into dust, and where merchants count their coins in the dim candlelight of markets long since extinguished. Empires rise like towers and collapse into rubble, leaving behind only inscriptions no one reads. Politicians, with their puffed speeches, imagine themselves architects of destiny, yet their words evaporate quicker than morning mist. Economists, with tables and charts, believe they hold the key to the future, yet their equations cannot account for the trembling of the human heart. The real prophets are not crowned, nor elected, nor enthroned. They wander with pens, brushes, questions, or silence. They are the philosophers, the writers, the artists, the visionaries—the prophets without altars—whose words and visions pierce the veils of time and reveal the direction of destiny. Plato, who imagined a cave where men sat chained, watching shadows cast upon the wall, spoke more truly of empires th...