Cogitating Ceviche's Week in Review (26-9) episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 8, 2026 · 22 MIN

Cogitating Ceviche's Week in Review (26-9)

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

The Cogitating Ceviché Week in Review (26-9)Discussion via NotebookLMEditorial SummaryThis week’s essays circled a common problem from several angles: what happens when institutions, systems, and habits begin to replace judgment, memory, and character. Calista Freiheit examined the danger of treating moral formation as something that can be delegated to programs and procedures. Conrad Hannon traced the migration of authority from visible command to interface design, then turned backward through Avicenna to ask what remains of the soul in an age of computation, and finally returned to the present with a sharp reflection on stale protest rituals confronting a world that no longer stands still long enough to be impressed by theater. Gio Marron’s selections added a literary and historical counterweight, pairing Conan Doyle’s disciplined suspense with Osborne Perry Anderson’s witness from Harper’s Ferry. Together, the week considered conscience, power, memory, and action: how they are formed, how they are disguised, and how they endure.ArticlesThe Problem With Outsourcing Moral FormationMarch 2, 2026Calista FreiheitModern society trusts programs, systems, and managed solutions a little too much. This essay asks what is lost when moral formation is handed off to institutions, procedures, or cultural machinery rather than cultivated through conviction, discipline, and lived responsibility.The UI of AuthorityMarch 3, 2026Conrad HannonAuthority once arrived by decree, visible and unapologetic. Now it often arrives through menus, permissions, and quiet interface choices. Conrad tracks how power learned to hide itself within systems that seem neutral while still directing behavior.Avicenna and the Algorithmic SoulMarch 4, 2026Conrad T HannonIn this installment of Past Forward, classical philosophy meets machine logic. Avicenna becomes a guide for thinking about mind, selfhood, and whether the language of computation can account for what older thinkers would have called the soul.The Adventure Of The Solitary CyclistMarch 4, 2026Gio MarronA return to Conan Doyle offers pacing, mystery, and precision. The selection reminds readers why Holmes still matters: not merely for plot, but for the disciplined art of attention in a culture that prefers distraction.Protesting Plywood: On Demanding a World That Has Already Moved OnMarch 6, 2026Conrad HannonSome forms of protest harden into ritual long after their target has changed. This piece looks at the pathos and absurdity of symbolic resistance that keeps performing for an audience that has already left the theater.A Voice From Harper’s FerryMarch 7, 2026Gio MarronOsborne Perry Anderson’s account brings readers close to one of the most charged moments in American history. It is a document of witness, conflict, and conviction, and a reminder that history is most unsettling when it speaks in its own voice.Quote of the Week“How power migrated from the decree to the dropdown menu.”—from “The UI of Authority” by Conrad HannonQuestionsThe Problem With Outsourcing Moral Formation* What parts of moral formation can be taught by institutions, and what parts cannot be outsourced without damage?* Does a programmatic society weaken character by encouraging compliance over judgment?* What habits still form conscience better than systems do?The UI of Authority* Which kinds of power become harder to resist when they present themselves as convenience?* How often do people confuse usability with legitimacy?* What would transparent authority look like in a digital age?Avicenna and the Algorithmic Soul* Can computational language describe consciousness without reducing it?* What does Avicenna offer that modern technical discourse tends to ignore?* Is the soul a metaphysical claim, a philosophical necessity, or an outdated category?The Adventure Of The Solitary Cyclist* What does Holmes teach about attention that modern readers have forgotten?* Why does disciplined observation still feel dramatic?* What makes an old mystery continue to work in a very different century?Protesting Plywood* When does protest become performance rather than persuasion?* How can a movement tell whether it is confronting power or reenacting a familiar script?* What forms of dissent still meet the present on its own terms?A Voice From Harper’s Ferry* What changes when history is read through witness rather than summary?* How should readers handle texts shaped by crisis, cause, and memory?* What does Harper’s Ferry still reveal about conviction and consequence in American life?Additional Resources* Frederick Douglass, “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?”* Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America* Avicenna, selections from The Book of Healing or secondary essays on Avicennian psychology* Neil Postman, Technopoly* Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, The Return of Sherlock Holmes* W.E.B. Du Bois, John BrownCalls to ActionFor Calista Freiheit readers: Read this week’s essay and consider where you have mistaken structure for virtue.For Conrad Hannon readers: Follow the hidden architecture of one ordinary system this week and ask what kind of obedience it quietly produces.For Conrad T Hannon readers: Revisit one premodern thinker and test whether the old vocabulary still explains what the modern one cannot.For Gio Marron readers: Spend time with a primary text this week, not a summary, and let the original voice do its work.For everyone: Share the piece that stayed with you most, and tell us not only what you agreed with, but what unsettled you.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 Ceviche's Week in Review (26-9)

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The Cogitating Ceviché Week in Review (26-9)Discussion via NotebookLMEditorial SummaryThis week’s essays circled a common problem from several angles: what happens when institutions, systems, and habits begin to replace judgment, memory, and...

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