In life, we have come to give "monolithic" objects (religion, political institutions, etc.) too much power. This argues that the monoliths of our world are fragile and subject to greater powers (people, for example).
The copper rectangle is the monolith. The wind, people touching, the long copper rods reaching down from above are all major powers compared to the "monolith".
The underlying concept
In life, we have come to give "monolithic" objects (religion, political institutions, etc.) too much power. This argues that the monoliths of our world are fragile and subject to greater powers (people, for example).
The copper rectangle is the monolith. The wind, people touching, the long copper rods reaching down from above are all major powers compared to the "monolith".
Chris