Topic
the self
8 essays follow this thread across the codex.
- 01 Literature · June 2026 · 9 min
The Hidden Trick That Powers the Modern Novel: Free Indirect Speech
A sentence can think a character’s thought in the narrator’s grammar — and that quiet fusion is the engine of the modern novel.
- 02 Philosophy · June 2026 · 9 min
The Hard Problem of Consciousness: Why Science Can’t Explain Feeling
Three centuries ago, science bought its power by exiling felt experience from the physical world. Every modern theory of consciousness quietly tries to smuggle it back, and calls the return a discovery.
- 03 Art · June 2026 · 14 min
From Realism to Abstraction: How Modern Art Mirrored the Mind’s Unraveling
A century of Western painting, from Courbet’s laborers to Warhol’s soup cans, read as a seismograph of the collective mind — recording, frame by frame, how science, war, and the unconscious dismantled our faith in a single, stable, knowable world.
- 04 Philosophy · June 2026 · 15 min
The Six Schools of Indian Philosophy and Their Western Echoes
India’s six orthodox schools mapped the mind, the atom, the ritual word, and the self with a rigor that anticipates Descartes, Democritus, and Hume — yet the resonances mislead as often as they illuminate, and the differences are where the real philosophy lives.
- 05 Artificial Intelligence · June 2026 · 13 min
From the Golem to GPT: Humanity’s Oldest Dream of Making Minds
From the clay of Prague to the weights of a language model, the dream of a made mind has always been one dream — and one warning: that what we shape in our own image may turn, and look back at us.
- 06 Mythology · June 2026 · 14 min
The Philosophy of the Mahabharata and Ramayana: When Doing Right Isn’t Simple
Two Sanskrit epics refuse the consolation that right action is ever clean — and in that refusal lies their unbearable, enduring truth about duty, truth, and the cornered self.
- 07 Literature · June 2026 · 8 min
Why Reading a Convincing Villain Is a Moral Education
A convincing monster lends you his appetite for a few pages, and that borrowed wanting, dangerous as it is, may be the one moral education a reader cannot get any other way.
- 08 Technology · June 2026 · 9 min
No Tool Is Neutral: How Objects Quietly Shape Who You Become
Every made thing arrives with a sketch of who you ought to become. The chair, the keyboard, and the feed each draft a different person — and you mistake their opinion for a fact because it is made of plastic and steel.