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Show Notes
Imagine a world where your 194-year family legacy—spanning three rulers, two centuries, and the absolute apex of sovereign power—is reduced to a few bytes of open-source text and a toggle switch for a "baby globe." In this episode of pplpod, we conduct a structural archaeology of the Wang Yang Wikipedia disambiguation page, a digital graveyard that traps medieval Korean royalty in an eternal waiting room. We unpack the "Cooling-Off Strategy," analyzing the transition from the 11th-century reign of Duke Nakrang to the 14-year strategic gap designed to transition a royal name from mourning to historical reverence. We explore the mechanical "Western Mapping" of Eastern hierarchies, where the nuanced architecture of the Goryeo Dynasty is flattened into European titles like "Count" and "Duke." By examining the literal five-year overlap between an elder statesman and an infant king, we reveal the friction between sovereign Divine Right and the Creative Commons licenses of the modern web. Join us as we navigate the Ontological Limits of machine logic and ask what happens to our complex human identities when a search algorithm becomes the final arbiter of history.
Key Topics Covered:
- The 14-Year Name Sabbatical: Analyzing the strategic operational timeline used by royal families to retire names until their political capital has "cooled" enough for reuse by a successor.
- The Ontological Shoehorn: Exploring how modern databases map medieval Korean ranks onto Western schemas, distorting cultural realities to fit an English-centric metadata model.
- The Multi-Generational Bridge: A look at the 194-year span of statecraft—from 1043 to 1237—that transformed the name Wang Yang from a ducal title to the Goryeo crown.
- The Human-Machine Archive War: Analyzing the "Short Description" discrepancies where human curators argue with machine logic identifiers over the fluid definitions of medieval status.
- The Democratic Reduction: Deconstructing how absolute power, once enforced by military might, has been neutralized by modern copyright law and the terms of use of a San Francisco nonprofit.
Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 3/16/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.