Tag Archives: law and conscience

EXTERIOR VALIDATION AND INTERIOR SUFFICIENCY

A simple contrast between a Rolex and a Casio becomes a meditation on Christianity, conscience, and the age of AI. As automated systems expand, the real danger is not overt tyranny but the quiet erosion of inward life. When conscience is overshadowed by authority and behaviour becomes measurable performance, we edge closer to Orwell’s vision — not through malice, but through efficiency.

BY THEIR FRUITS: A STRESS-TEST THEORY OF BELIEF

What happens when inward moral responsibility collapses and is replaced by external control? Tracing a line from Adam and Eve through Christianity, Imodern bureaucracy, and AI surveillance, this reflection explores how belief systems shape moral psychology — and how extremism emerges when conscience gives way to compliance. Individuation, once a personal journey, now appears as a civilisational safeguard.