Section V: Deconstructing the Human Order

Introduction

What happens when morality is detached from God? The next collapse is not just ethical, but existential. In this section, we move from the deconstruction of right and wrong to the deconstruction of the human person.

Modern thinkers have not only redefined truth and morality—they’ve reimagined what it means to be human. No longer seen as a creature made in the image of God, the person is now a node in a network, a biochemical algorithm, or a self-constructed identity. The soul is not denied outright; it is simply deemed unnecessary.

In this new vision, personhood becomes fluid. Identity is detached from nature, history, or even biology. Dignity is decoupled from essence and tied instead to autonomy, visibility, or perceived utility. What remains is a fragile, often incoherent self—one that must be curated, protected, and endlessly affirmed.

Each chapter in this section traces a strand in this unraveling:

As we follow these threads, a new religion emerges—not of transcendence, but of self-creation.

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