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This source explores the surprising structural alignment between ancient mysticism and modern cybernetic science, suggesting that both disciplines map the exact same underlying reality through different vocabularies. By using systems theory as a "Rosetta Stone," the text redefines traditional spiritual concepts like sin, nosis, and repentance as technical descriptions of error correction, self-observation, and systemic reorganization. This framework shifts the focus of human change away from the myth of isolated willpower toward a more precise, mechanical understanding of feedback loops and internal architecture. Ultimately, the text argues that these isomorphic patterns persist across human consciousness and artificial intelligence alike, revealing a universal, rational order known historically as the Logos.
https://notebooklm.google.com/notebook/2a33a00f-587d-45d3-8cc1-6db7e502c9b3
By Joseph Michael GarrityThis source explores the surprising structural alignment between ancient mysticism and modern cybernetic science, suggesting that both disciplines map the exact same underlying reality through different vocabularies. By using systems theory as a "Rosetta Stone," the text redefines traditional spiritual concepts like sin, nosis, and repentance as technical descriptions of error correction, self-observation, and systemic reorganization. This framework shifts the focus of human change away from the myth of isolated willpower toward a more precise, mechanical understanding of feedback loops and internal architecture. Ultimately, the text argues that these isomorphic patterns persist across human consciousness and artificial intelligence alike, revealing a universal, rational order known historically as the Logos.
https://notebooklm.google.com/notebook/2a33a00f-587d-45d3-8cc1-6db7e502c9b3