ʿAtā was evil without reason. An invisible acid filled the
void he created, eating away. ʿAtā freely and imaginatively practiced, and The Sorcerer considers him among the worst of all time just because he did not have to be.
For ʿAtā, standing next to Marut in the end was unbearable. Marut started burning the air in consumption. Just burning it into himself.
For ʿAtā, standing next to Marut in the end was unbearable. Marut started burning the air in consumption. Just burning it into himself.
Another flip of the coin, and we would be sport for evil, evil for fun, evil for the purpose of sport.
Think about it. Think by rational numbers about that
kind of evil in context to what the textbooks tell you. The logic of allowing
it to live and those that built it to exist.
Can you put that evil into context? Not until you meet it from a non-linear perspective. Not until you realize the math inside the word. And not until Marut makes you understand what it means to be physically and mentally and arithmetically and literally evil.
Can you put that evil into context? Not until you meet it from a non-linear perspective. Not until you realize the math inside the word. And not until Marut makes you understand what it means to be physically and mentally and arithmetically and literally evil.
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