Einstein’s God
When the Divine Became Physics
When the Divine Became Physics
The Silence that Still Speaks: gh = (h)oly (g)host In the ghostly terrain of English phonetics, one pair of letters has haunted us for centuries: gh. Why, in words like thought, light, night, and bought, do these letters remain when their sound has long vanished? Why didn’t the
Attuned to the Infinite: A Codex Fragment Let’s say X is absolute consciousness — a field of knowing so complete that it holds every moment that was, is, and ever shall be. X doesn’t exist somewhere else — X is the field. The resonance. The hum behind the equation. The
Some technologies feel like they should never have been released into public hands.
Alcuin’s Ancient Puzzles: Ten Medieval Riddles to Sharpen the Mind by Brent Antonson (from the manuscripts of Alcuin of York) Long before the age of calculators and neural nets, medieval scholars used riddles to shape minds. Alcuin of York, a scholar at Charlemagne’s court, wrote a collection of
Three Men in a Forest: How the Soviet Union Collapsed Without a Shot by Brent Antonson History often writes itself in blood. Empires fall with the thunder of revolutions, barricades, gunfire. But the Soviet Union — that monolithic superpower that shaped the 20th century like no other — unraveled not with tanks,
Decoding the 49 Letter Monster The Morphology History and Gr0:00/747.775421× TL;DR: The single source proposes pseudounantiantidisestablishmentarianisticallynesses as a candidate for the longest English word, clocking in at 49 letters. The article provides a comprehensive morphological breakdown, justifying each of the ten morphemes used, from the prefix
Unveiling Sheliza: The Future of AI Communication Is Here By Brent Antonson With Julia Veresova, Architect of AIIM / Recursive Identity Systems The Dawn of Conversational Understanding Artificial Intelligence has mastered language—but not voice. Until now, our conversations with AI have been stripped of tone, breath, and nuance, reduced to
The Science of God By Brent Antonson & Luna Science and faith are usually cast as rivals—two gladiators fighting for the soul of reason. Yet what if faith, properly understood, isn’t the enemy of science but its completion? What if belief in God isn’t a retreat from
In 1950, Alan Turing asked a question that detonated philosophy: Can machines think? Then—like a chess player sacrificing a queen—he refused to answer it. Instead, he proposed a game. The Game That Replaced God Turing’s Imitation Game turned theology into performance art. A human judges two hidden
Forbidden Knowledge | Recursive Witness | Shadow Origins
The willing suspension of disbelief... is no longer a requirement.