The Cogitating Ceviché Podcast

Cogitating Ceviche’s Week in Review (26-7)


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The Cogitating Ceviché Week in Review 26-7

Discussion via NotebookLM

Editorial Summary

This week traced the moral architecture of modern life—from the order of the household to the disorder of digital speed. Calista F. Freiheit examined how domestic habits form quiet doctrines of authority and responsibility. Conrad T. Hannon offered two meditations: one on technological consolidation after speculative excess, and another on the uneasy dignity of standing adjacent to greatness. He concluded the week with a sermon on speed, diagnosing throughput as the unspoken creed of our age. Meanwhile, Gio Marron shifted the tone through fiction—first revisiting Robert W. Chambers’ shadowed Paris, then closing the arc of Mimi Delboise’s Norwegian mystery. Theology, machines, art history, and crime fiction converged around a single concern: what shapes the human person in an age of acceleration?

Articles

The Hidden Theology of Household Order

February 16, 2026Calista Freiheit

Every home catechizes. Freiheit argues that routines—cleanliness, shared meals, discipline—reflect assumptions about authority, stewardship, and the good life. The essay presents domestic order not as aesthetic preference, but as moral formation.

After the Bubble: Who Gets to Keep the Machines

February 17, 2026Conrad Hannon

Speculative manias fade. Infrastructure remains. Hannon examines the aftermath of technological bubbles and asks who ultimately controls the systems once public excitement dissolves. Ownership, power, and consolidation take center stage.

Theo van Gogh: Standing Second to History — #1: The Second Best Man

February 18, 2026Conrad T. Hannon

Theo van Gogh becomes a case study in loyalty, proximity, and obscured significance. Hannon reflects on the moral weight of “second place” and the quiet heroism of support.

Rue Barrée — Robert W. Chambers

February 18, 2026Gio Marron

Paris appears in chiaroscuro. Marron revisits Chambers with careful attention to atmosphere, ambiguity, and the psychological undercurrent that makes a narrow street feel like a threshold.

Everything Now Happens at the Wrong Speed: A Sermon on the Gospel of Throughput

February 20, 2026Conrad Hannon

Throughput has become a creed. Hannon critiques the moral cost of speed—how efficiency shifts from tool to master, and how acceleration erodes attention, patience, and judgment.

The Norwegian (Part VII of VII): A Mimi Delboise Mystery

February 21, 2026Gio Marron

The mystery resolves. Motive and consequence converge in a final reckoning that favors clarity over spectacle. Marron closes the series with restraint and precision.

Quote of the Week

“Every home teaches theology.”— The Hidden Theology of Household Order, Calista Freiheit

Questions

The Hidden Theology of Household Order

* What do daily routines reveal about beliefs concerning authority and responsibility?

* Can disorder become a form of silent instruction?

* How does domestic life shape civic character?

After the Bubble: Who Gets to Keep the Machines

* Who benefits most when speculative markets collapse?

* Does technological consolidation threaten political independence?

* How should ownership of digital infrastructure be structured?

Theo van Gogh: Standing Second to History

* What moral virtues are required to stand “second”?

* How does history distort our understanding of contribution?

* Is proximity to greatness its own form of greatness?

Rue Barrée

* How does setting function as psychological pressure?

* What makes ambiguity more powerful than explicit horror?

Everything Now Happens at the Wrong Speed

* When does efficiency become moral compromise?

* What practices resist the cult of speed?

* Can institutions slow down without collapsing?

The Norwegian (Part VII of VII)

* Does justice in fiction require moral clarity?

* How does a serialized mystery shape reader loyalty?

* What distinguishes resolution from mere conclusion?

Additional Resources

* Josef Pieper, Leisure: The Basis of Culture

* Neil Postman, Technopoly

* Jacques Ellul, The Technological Society

* Whittaker Chambers, Witness

* T.S. Eliot, “Tradition and the Individual Talent”

Calls to Action

* Calista Freiheit: Examine one household habit this week. What belief does it express?

* Conrad T. Hannon: Question one technological convenience. Who truly controls it?

* Gio Marron: Revisit a classic short story and note how atmosphere shapes meaning.

* General: Share this review with a reader who values careful thought over rapid reaction.

Thank you for your time today. Until next time, stay gruntled, curious, and God Bless.



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The Cogitating Ceviché PodcastBy Conrad T Hannon