We are creating a series of YouTube videos under the “edu-“ label to guide users through the migration from ArcoLinux to Arch Linux. These tutorials aim to make the transition process smoother by explaining each step clearly and providing practical examples. Whether you’re switching to gain more control or to learn vanilla Arch, our edu- videos are here to support your journey.

ArcoLinux has stopped

Teaching never stops—because learning is a lifelong journey for all of us.

Freedom: The End Of The Human Condition May 2026

Critiques modern political and social movements (e.g., socialism, political correctness) as forms of "pseudo-idealism" that attempt to feel good without addressing the underlying human condition. Critical Reception

Because the intellect could not explain its departures from instinct, it felt "criticised" by those instincts. This led to a defensive state of anger, egocentricity, and alienation —the root of all human conflict.

is a definitive treatise by Australian biologist Jeremy Griffith that claims to provide the "holy grail" of biological insight: a first-principle explanation for why humans are capable of both immense love and extreme destruction. Published in 2016, the book argues that humanity’s "upset" state is a psychologically healable condition rather than an immutable biological flaw. The Core Thesis: Instinct vs. Intellect FREEDOM: The End Of The Human Condition

Our pre-existing, selfless instincts (inherited from a cooperative primate past) clashed with our newly evolved conscious intellect, which needed to experiment and understand the world.

Explains how humans acquired their moral soul through a long process of maternal nurturing, citing the cooperative behaviour of bonobos as evidence. Critiques modern political and social movements (e

By biologically explaining why the intellect had to rebel to find knowledge, Griffith argues that the "guilt" of being human is removed, allowing for the psychological rehabilitation of the species. Key Themes & Insights

Defines "God" as the teleological, universal drive toward "Integrative Meaning"—the tendency for matter to organize into ever-larger, stable wholes. is a definitive treatise by Australian biologist Jeremy

A central metaphor describing a migrating stork (instinct) that develops a conscious mind (intellect) and is "criticised" for deviating from its path, illustrating the origin of human psychosis.