History × Data × Ideas
Code & Cogito
Spanning 500 Years, Rediscovering the World Through Python
Write in Code, Code in Thoughts
From the Renaissance to quantum mechanics, from the Industrial Revolution to the AI era — exploring history, philosophy, and the future through data and code
Explore Our Series
Cross-disciplinary approaches to understanding history, philosophy, and the world
Series 1: Renaissance Reborn
The Digital Rebirth of the Renaissance (1350-1859)

A complete journey through 500 years of intellectual evolution, from Florence to Darwin. Analyzing network effects, wealth accumulation, and idea propagation with Python.
12 Articles
70+ Code
6hr Read
Series 2: Industrial Awakening
Industrial & Data Revolution (1760-2020)

From steam engines to AI, deconstructing 250 years of technological change with data. 5 articles completed.
5 Done
Data Analysis
Coming Soon
Series 3: Entangled Realities
Quantum Meets Eastern Philosophy (1900-2026)

When quantum physics meets Buddhism and Taoism, exploring the deep resonance between science and Eastern wisdom. 12 deep analyses, 40+ simulations.
12 Planned
40+ Code
Coming Soon
Series 4: Code & Philosophy
Philosophy for Programmers

When you debug, you’re actually doing philosophy. Use engineering thinking to explore truth, knowledge, consciousness, and free will. Not teaching philosophy — thinking alongside you.
Ongoing
30+ Code Demos
Thinking Tools
Latest Articles
In-depth articles + Python code + Data visualization
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When Ideas Became Copyable: How the Printing Press Ignited the First Information Revolution
Book costs dropped 68%. Literacy rates surged. Gutenberg didn’t just invent printing — he triggered humanity’s first information explosion.
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Humanism — The Birth of Human Dignity
A twenty-year-old Italian scholar named Petrarch was rummaging through the papal library on a dull afternoon. He wasn’t looking for anything in particular — jus
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The Magic of Vanishing Points: How Perspective Turned Flat Canvas into Three-Dimensional Worlds
In 1413, an architect held up a mirror in front of a cathedral. When the painting and reality perfectly overlapped, art gained its third dimension forever.
