Why this word is great
LUCIFERIAN — [Adjective] Of or relating to Lucifer, connoting a satanic, devilish, or prideful character, or pertaining to the doctrines of the 4th-century schismatic bishop Lucifer of Cagliari. From the proper name Lucifer (from Latin lucifer, "light-bringer," the morning star, a name later applied to Satan) + the suffix -ian ("belonging to or relating to"). Unlike "Satanic," which denotes specific allegiance to a personified evil, or "diabolical," which emphasizes sheer wickedness in action, Luciferian evokes the more tragic and complex gravity of prideful rebellion and lost radiance. It is the cold, intellectual gleam in a heretic’s eye, the architectural ambition of a spire built too high, and the precise moment a brilliant argument curdles into hubris—a light that chose to fall, and the long shadow its autonomy casts.