EPISODE · Mar 1, 2026 · 21 MIN
Cogitating Ceviche’s Week in Review (25-8)
from The Cogitating Ceviché Podcast · host Conrad T Hannon, Calista F. Freiheit, and Gio Marron
🗞️ Cogitating Ceviche’s Week in Review (25-8)Discussion via NotebookLM (February 23–28, 2026)✍️ Editorial SummaryThis week at The Cogitating Ceviche, questions of visibility, authority, restraint, and judgment shaped the conversation.Calista Freiheit reframed modesty as responsibility toward others rather than private self-expression. Conrad Hannon explored documentation as theology—and later challenged the myth of neutral governance. Conrad T. Hannon reflected on A. E. Housman’s disciplined refusal to expand beyond his measure. Gio Marron revisited Robert W. Chambers and Franz Kafka, guiding readers through courts where authority feels distant yet absolute.Across essays and genres, one thread held firm: what we fail to see, log, restrain, or question will quietly rule us.📚 This Week’s Essays✨ A Christian case for modesty as responsibility toward othersWhy Modesty Is About Others, Not Ourselves📅 February 23, 2026 — Calista FreiheitA reconsideration of modesty not as personal suppression, but as charity embodied in public life.🗂️ On the theology of documentation and the moral weight of record-keepingNothing Exists Until It Is Logged📅 February 24, 2026 — Conrad HannonAn exploration of archives, systems, and the unsettling power of what goes unrecorded.📖 Why A. E. Housman refused expansion in an age of amplificationA. E. Housman: Precision Without Expansion📅 February 25, 2026 — Conrad T. HannonA study in precision, restraint, and the virtue of remaining small.🐉 A return to Robert W. Chambers’ unsettling court of unseen judgmentIn The Court Of The Dragon📅 February 25, 2026 — Gio MarronA meditation on dread, sacred imagery, and spiritual tension.⚖️ Examining the illusion of neutral governance in modern systemsRule by Nobody: The Illusion of Neutral Governance📅 February 27, 2026 — Conrad HannonA critique of technocratic neutrality and diffuse accountability.🏛️ Revisiting Kafka’s vision of accusation without explanationThe Trial📅 February 28, 2026 — Gio MarronAn examination of institutional opacity and existential dread.💬 Quote of the Week“What is never recorded may as well never have happened.”— Conrad Hannon🤔 Questions for ReflectionModesty as Responsibility* How does shifting modesty toward responsibility change its meaning?* Can modesty survive without a shared moral framework?Documentation and Reality* Who controls the archive—and what does that imply?* What happens when a culture forgets how to remember?Precision Without Expansion* Is scale a measure of success—or a distraction?* Can restraint itself function as resistance?Courts and Judgment* Why does unseen authority evoke deeper fear than visible power?* What sustains accusation without clarity?📚 Additional Reading* Hannah Arendt, The Human Condition* C. S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man* Franz Kafka, The Trial* Robert W. Chambers, The King in Yellow* Alasdair MacIntyre, After VirtueIf you’d like, I can also:* Tighten the descriptive links to be more SEO-forward* Or sharpen them to be more rhetorically provocative for higher click-through rates.Thank you for your time today. Until next time, stay gruntled, curious, and God Bless. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thecogitatingceviche.substack.com/subscribe
NOW PLAYING
Cogitating Ceviche’s Week in Review (25-8)
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Mar 26, 2026 ·1m
Mar 19, 2026 ·34m
Feb 18, 2026 ·11m
Feb 11, 2026 ·45m