Cogitating Ceviché’s Week in Review (26-6) episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 15, 2026 · 14 MIN

Cogitating Ceviché’s Week in Review (26-6)

from The Cogitating Ceviché Podcast · host Conrad T Hannon

The Cogitating Ceviché Week in Review (26-6)Discussion via NotebookLMEditorial SummaryThis week at The Cogitating Ceviché, misunderstanding, memory, machinery, and mystery braided together in striking ways. Calista Freiheit reflected on the cost of expecting clarity in a faith built on paradox. Conrad Hannon and Conrad T. Hannon examined progress from two angles—our surrender to machine memory and our inheritance from efficiency’s most severe architect. Gio Marron returned both to the windswept moors of literary obsession and to the tightening circle of a modern mystery. Across genres and voices, one question lingered: what do we lose when we demand control—over belief, over memory, over labor, over love?ArticlesWhy Christianity Assumes You Will Be MisunderstoodFebruary 9, 2026Calista FreiheitCalista Freiheit argues that modern Christians are unsettled not by persecution, but by confusion. In an age that prizes clarity and instant comprehension, she contends that faith has always required endurance through misinterpretation. The piece invites readers to reconsider whether misunderstanding is not an anomaly—but an expectation.Perfect Recall, Zero MemoryFebruary 10, 2026Conrad HannonConrad Hannon explores the paradox of digital permanence: as systems remember everything, individuals outsource the discipline of remembering. The essay reflects on technological over-reliance and asks whether perfect recall erodes the moral and intellectual muscle memory once formed through effort.Frederick Winslow Taylor: Efficiency Without Mercy (#2 Anti-Heroes of Progress)February 11, 2026Conrad T. HannonIn this second installment of Anti-Heroes of Progress, Conrad T. Hannon dissects the legacy of Frederick Winslow Taylor. Taylor’s scientific management reshaped industry, but at what human cost? The essay balances admiration for industrial order with unease at its cold arithmetic.Wuthering HeightsFebruary 11, 2026Gio MarronGio Marron revisits Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë, examining obsession, isolation, and the destructive symmetry of love returned in kind. The piece moves beyond summary, drawing out the emotional architecture that makes the novel endure.Banned on Earth, Essential in OrbitFebruary 13, 2026Conrad HannonFrom controlled substances to controlled ecosystems, Conrad Hannon considers whether the plants prohibited on Earth may one day sustain human life beyond it. The essay blends speculative science with cultural critique, asking how context reshapes moral judgment.The Norwegian (Part VI of VII) – A Mimi Delboise MysteryFebruary 14, 2026Gio MarronTension escalates in Part VI of Gio Marron’s serialized mystery. Clues narrow. Motives sharpen. The emotional stakes rise alongside the investigative ones. As the series approaches its conclusion, the narrative tightens around both crime and conscience.Quote of the Week“We built systems that never forget and stopped doing the work of remembering.”— Perfect Recall, Zero Memory, Conrad HannonQuestionsWhy Christianity Assumes You Will Be Misunderstood* Has the modern expectation of clarity reshaped how faith communities communicate truth?* Is misunderstanding a failure of witness—or an inevitable feature of conviction?* How should believers respond when clarity does not resolve conflict?Perfect Recall, Zero Memory* Does technological recall weaken personal discipline, or merely redirect it?* What is lost when memory becomes retrieval instead of formation?* Can digital permanence coexist with forgiveness and forgetting?Frederick Winslow Taylor: Efficiency Without Mercy* Where is the line between order and dehumanization?* Has Taylorism truly faded—or does it persist in algorithmic management?* Can efficiency ever be neutral?Wuthering Heights* Is Heathcliff a victim, villain, or both?* Does obsession give life meaning—or destroy it?* Why does emotional extremity continue to attract modern readers?Banned on Earth, Essential in Orbit* Should moral judgments shift with context?* How might space exploration alter cultural taboos?* What other “forbidden” tools may become necessary under new conditions?The Norwegian (Part VI of VII)* How does suspense alter moral perception?* What clues now appear more significant in hindsight?* What resolution would feel earned rather than convenient?Additional Resources* The Abolition of Man by C. S. Lewis* Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman* The Principles of Scientific Management by Frederick Winslow Taylor* Jane Eyre by Charlotte BrontëCalls to Action* From Calista Freiheit: Share this essay with someone who has wrestled with misunderstanding in faith—and ask them what endurance looks like.* From Conrad Hannon: Examine one habit you have outsourced to technology this week. Reclaim it, even briefly.* From Conrad T. Hannon: Look for Taylorism in your workplace—or in your own habits. Efficiency reveals values.* From Gio Marron: Revisit a classic novel or reread the earlier chapters of The Norwegian before the finale arrives.General Call: If this week’s reflections sharpened your thinking, share the publication and invite a friend to subscribe. Conversation deepens conviction.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

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Cogitating Ceviché’s Week in Review (26-6)

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The Cogitating Ceviché Week in Review (26-6)Discussion via NotebookLMEditorial SummaryThis week at The Cogitating Ceviché, misunderstanding, memory, machinery, and mystery braided together in striking ways. Calista Freiheit reflected on the cost of...

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