
The Funeral of Justice,offers a sweeping historical and philosophical critique of how the concept of justice has evolved from ancient times to the present day. This cinematic exploration traces the shift from justice being viewed as a sacred, divine concept rooted in cosmic harmony to its modern perception as a system of convenience and control** shaped by human interests. The source explains that early civilizations equated law with truth and alignment with order, but this integrity was corrupted as justice became systematized by entities like Rome and subsequent bureaucratic powers The narrative laments that politics, profit, and human arrogance** have ultimately replaced revelation with regulation, turning law into mere legalism and a weapon used in a marketplace of interpretations. Finally, the text suggests that while traditional justice may be dead, **wisdom and conscience offer the only path to its potential resurrection.