@rohanpaul_ai The reason Anthropic is saying this is that its $800 billion valuation would plummet by 90% in the face of open-source companies like DeepSeek. It's all about the money, not the ideology.
6-Tonight, consider: if Bai Ze named all monsters, what remains unspoken? True mystery isn't the known 11,520 kinds. It's the ever-waiting 11,521st—the one still hidden in the mist.
1-When Emperor Huangdi reached the eastern sea, a beast emerged from the mist. Its voice rang like metal: "I am Bai Ze. I know all things under heaven—the ways of gods and spirits." In that moment, emperor met oracle, and myth began.
5-Bai Ze crossed the sea to Japan. There, it remained a protector, but grew more majestic. Culture morphs in migration, but the core holds: the namer of all monsters is order against chaos.
4-Its image transformed: lion's body, two horns, goat's beard. Some say three eyes under its forelegs, seeing truth. But the eyes always held wisdom. It knew everything, yet stood with us. Why? To name is to tame. To know is to cease fearing.
3-The "Bai Ze Tu" was more than a list. It recorded each monster's form, habits, and how to dispel them. People painted Bai Ze on doors, under pillows, on banners. It became our shield against the unknown.
2-Bai Ze revealed: "Since chaos parted, essence became matter, souls transformed—11,520 kinds in all." It named them. Some names held power, some brought chills. Huangdi ordered them recorded. The world's first bestiary was born.
Tell me which story you want to hear tonight:
A) One who waited a century for a single promise.
B) One whose love turned to hatred, becoming a vengeful ghost.
C) An object that gained a soul.
D) An ancient beast that escaped from the Classic of Mountains and Seas.
Late night, proofreading. The monsters in the pages seem to sigh: "We don't want to scare you. We just wait for someone to speak our names in the light."