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Exploring the overlap between code and reason

Deep dives into tech, critical thought, creative tools, and the occasional system meltdown. If it’s complex, flawed, or misunderstood, I’m probably writing about it.

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The farce of the Nobel Prizes

The Nobel Prizes endure not as measures of greatness, but as dependence on authority to define it.
The illusion of excellence. Each year, as autumn approaches, the world pauses to witness the ritual of genius. Names are read aloud in Stockholm and Oslo, accompanied by applause, headlines, and a sense of moral satisfaction. The Nobel Prizes, announced…

Homeopathy, the memory of water and other lies

Homeopathy endures not because it works, but because belief sells better than evidence.
The business of diluted hope. There are few inventions as resilient, profitable, and scientifically hollow as homeopathy. For more than two centuries, it has survived revolutions, pandemics, and the entire rise of modern medicine, thriving not through evidence but through…

Do binaural beats really repair sleep? Between science and surrender

Binaural beats promise you control, but sleep still demands trust.
The dream of engineered rest. The modern world is tired. Everywhere we look, someone is selling a solution for exhaustion, pills, apps, playlists, headsets, frequencies. Sleep has become a skill to be optimized, not a state to be entered.

Digital resurrection or when AI revives the dead

Modern technology makes the idea of a ‘live’ performance literal.
The illusion of immortality made real. It begins quietly, with a voice. Someone’s mother, long dead, greeting them through a phone speaker. A pause, a small laugh, a familiar inflection perfectly captured by an algorithm trained on years of…

Were the Egyptian Pyramids built to be used as power plants?

Three monuments, one question: were they tombs, or something far more powerful?
The electric myth of stone. Few structures in human history have inspired more speculation than the Egyptian Pyramids. Their symmetry, scale, and apparent mathematical precision continue to provoke a question that official archaeology seems unable to silence: were they something…

No, vinyl doesn’t sound better than CD

For decades, the music industry has sold us nostalgia as science, but the physics tell another story.
The myth of analog warmth. Few debates in modern audio inspire as much passion as the one between vinyl and digital sound. For some, the gentle crackle of a record, the ritual of placing the needle, and the tactile presence…