Cogitating Ceviché’s Week in Review (26-17) episode artwork

EPISODE · May 3, 2026 · 22 MIN

Cogitating Ceviché’s Week in Review (26-17)

from The Cogitating Ceviché Podcast · host Conrad T Hannon, Calista F. Freiheit, and Gio Marron

Cogitating Ceviché’s Week in Review (26-17)Discussion via NotebookLMThis week moved between reverence and refusal, vocabulary and voltage, orphaned children and lost worlds. Calista Freiheit opened with the ancient posture modern systems cannot teach. Conrad Hannon pressed hard on the false promises of scale, distribution, and influence. Gio Marron returned readers to Dickens and Conan Doyle, where hunger, danger, discovery, and moral imagination still do their old work.ArticlesWhy Reverence Cannot Be ProgrammedCalista FreiheitApril 27, 2026A reflection on the ancient posture the modern world no longer knows how to teach, asking what happens when technology can simulate attention but not awe.Decentralization Is a Narrative. Gravity Is a Law.Conrad HannonApril 28, 2026A sharp look at distributed AI and the stubborn physical realities that keep pulling grand abstractions back toward power, infrastructure, and control.Simone Weil: Refusing the MovementConrad HannonApril 29, 2026Part three of Voices That Refused to Scale, focused on Simone Weil’s resistance to institutions, parties, and churches that might have converted conscience into influence.Oliver TwistGio MarronApril 29, 2026A return to Dickens’s world of poverty, crime, innocence, and social indictment, where a child’s hunger becomes a moral accusation.The Revenge of VocabularyConrad HannonMay 1, 2026A defense of words as the hidden skill beneath prompt engineering, arguing that clearer language still matters more than technical theater.The Lost WorldGio MarronMay 2, 2026A journey into Conan Doyle’s adventure of discovery, danger, and scientific bravado, where the unknown still has teeth.Quote of the Week“Why does every promise of distributed AI keep reassembling itself around the same substation?”— Decentralization Is a Narrative. Gravity Is a Law., Conrad HannonQuestions for ReflectionWhy Reverence Cannot Be ProgrammedWhat can technology imitate about reverence, and what remains beyond imitation?Can a culture recover reverence once it has trained itself to treat all things as inputs?Is attention without humility enough?Decentralization Is a Narrative. Gravity Is a Law.Why do systems that promise distribution often return to central points of power?What does AI infrastructure reveal about the gap between political language and physical reality?Is decentralization a structure, a story, or a sales pitch?Simone Weil: Refusing the MovementWhy might refusing influence be a moral act?What makes Weil’s resistance to parties, churches, and institutions so difficult to understand today?Can conscience survive when it becomes a brand?Oliver TwistHow does Dickens turn childhood vulnerability into social criticism?Why does Oliver’s innocence unsettle the world around him?What does the novel suggest about systems that punish the poor for being poor?The Revenge of VocabularyWhy does vocabulary matter more, not less, in an age of machine-generated language?What does a limited vocabulary do to thought?Is prompt engineering really a technical skill, or is it old-fashioned verbal precision wearing a new hat?The Lost WorldWhy do lost-world stories still appeal to modern readers?What does Professor Challenger reveal about ambition, science, and ego?Does discovery in adventure fiction expand the world, or expose the discoverer?Additional ResourcesProject Gutenberg: Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens — a public-domain text of Dickens’s novel. (Project Gutenberg)Project Gutenberg: The Lost World by Arthur Conan Doyle — a public-domain edition of Conan Doyle’s 1912 adventure novel. (Project Gutenberg)Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Simone Weil — a scholarly overview of Weil’s life, thought, activism, mysticism, and philosophical commitments. (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)NIST AI Risk Management Framework — a useful counterpoint for the week’s AI pieces, focused on managing risk in AI systems. (NIST)Calls to ActionFor Calista Freiheit readers: Consider where reverence still survives in daily life: prayer, family, nature, silence, duty, or memory.For Conrad Hannon readers: Follow the wires. Whenever a system promises liberation from structure, ask where the power, land, water, chips, and money are hiding.For Gio Marron readers: Revisit the classics not as museum pieces, but as living engines of plot, conscience, and danger.General call: Read slowly this week. The machines may be fast, but judgment still takes its time.Thank you for your time today. Until next time, stay gruntled, curious, and God Bless.Do you like what you read but aren’t yet ready or able to get a paid subscription? Then consider a one-time tip at:https://www.venmo.com/u/TheCogitatingCevicheKo-fi.com/thecogitatingceviche 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

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Cogitating Ceviché’s Week in Review (26-17)

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Cogitating Ceviché’s Week in Review (26-17)Discussion via NotebookLMThis week moved between reverence and refusal, vocabulary and voltage, orphaned children and lost worlds. Calista Freiheit opened with the ancient posture modern systems cannot...

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