After the Fall - Post-Apocalyptic Fiction, Science and Survival

What Does “Apocalypse” Really Mean? (It Doesn’t Mean What You Think)

John Michael Layne Season 1 Episode 1

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0:00 | 7:46

What does the word apocalypse actually mean?

Most of us associate it with destruction—collapse, catastrophe, the end of the world. But the original meaning of the word tells a very different story.

In this first episode of After the Fall, we explore the origins of the word apocalypse, how its meaning changed over time, and what that shift reveals about how humans think about the end of the world.

From ancient myths like Ragnarök to modern fears of pandemics, climate collapse, and technological risk, every civilization imagines its own ending. But these stories are rarely just about destruction—they’re about what catastrophe reveals.

We also explore a powerful idea: that disasters don’t just destroy societies—they reshape them, exposing underlying strengths, weaknesses, and truths that were already there.

If apocalypse originally meant a revealing, then maybe the end of the world isn’t just about collapse… but about what becomes visible when everything else falls away.

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🎙️ About the Show

After the Fall is a podcast about post-apocalyptic fiction, science, and survival—exploring how the world ends, and what might come after.