And I'm starting on the final draft of the chapter which dissects how the strategies of popularization of science used in the Soviet Union led to the conservation and preservation of esoteric and occult ideas under an overtly-atheist state. Super hard chapter, honestly - I've been looking through my notes and drafts all morning, and the mood is like "why did I think this was any good at all? whyyyy" - but I hope to make it at least close to the elegant construct in my mind.
I once had a funny encounter when I must have a had a very skeptical face expression during one of my friend's tirade about ghosts or something, and he asked me "так вы не верите в энергетику" and my response was a blank stare as I completely didn't get what he meant — I asked "you mean electric poles, plants?!" as the use of the term "энергетика" in the esoteric sense was completely foreign to me.
@kravietz Oh! I was wondering! Did Poland's technical circles have Galilei or Giordano Bruno filk, presenting them as scientists who bravely stood against the Inquisition (and, of course, who were a metaphor for tech people and the KGB in this context)? I know the Russian-speaking context had more than a few of those, but not so sure if the discourse had time to make it into Poland.