He begins with a fork in the road metaphor: one path leads to greatness, the other to oblivion. The question is not whether we face a choice, but whether we possess the knowledge necessary to choose correctly. He turns to the fourth chapter of Hosea, where the prophet warns that people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. This is not metaphor or philosophy. It is a direct statement about cause and effect. The critical question becomes: what knowledge? What specific understanding separates survival from collapse? He leaves the question hanging deliberately, because the answer requires examining what we have forgotten, what we have dismissed, and what the evidence of Earth's history has been trying to tell us all along.