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Debugging History: From Crashes to Patches, a Philosophical Journey through Human Code

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What if history wasn’t a timeline, but a broken operating system?
What if revolutions were resets, propaganda was malware, and ideologies were buggy patches that corrupted the soul of society?

Debugging History is a bold philosophical expedition through the glitches, crashes, and failed updates of civilization. Written in the spirit of Nietzsche, coded with the sharpness of a systems architect, and powered by the empathy of a rewired human, this book doesn’t simply recount the past — it deconstructs it, challenges it, and reimagines it.

Across 30 richly layered chapters, Flying Übermensch

The memory leaks that erase our collective experience

The fatal updates installed by ideology and empire

Emotional intelligence as a system tool

What-if scenarios (Uchronia) as valid patch experiments

The role of education, empathy, and imagination in maintaining historical code

AI’s new role as compiler, archivist, and simulator of human narrative

Through metaphors both technical and poetic, you’ll journey from the fall of empires to the architecture of myths, from the Holocaust’s moral kernel panic to globalization’s cultural latency, and finally — to quantum history, where the past itself exists in probabilistic superposition.

This is not a history book.
It’s a historical debugging interface for the 21st century.
And you are the patch.

160 pages, Kindle Edition

Published April 24, 2025

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Flying Übermensch

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