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Memory Without Witness, Truth Without Origin - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
Manage episode 484269292 series 3604075
Memory Without Witness, Truth Without Origin - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
A slow meditation on truth without origin, memory without witness, and the subtle loss of metaphor in a world rendered by machines.
What if the future didn’t arrive with force, but with recursion? In this episode, we introduce the theory of Recursive Plausibility: the idea that truth, memory, and presence are increasingly simulated by machines trained on their own outputs. Drawing from the work of Brian Massumi, Lauren Berlant, Avery Gordon, and contemporary epistemology, we explore how AI doesn’t just displace human thought—it inherits a world already withdrawing from its capacity to remember, misread, or remain.
This is not a manifesto or forecast. It’s a conceptual walk through the fading boundaries between simulation and sensation. We reflect on simulation theory, ambient estrangement, and the ethics of unclaimed knowledge—questioning how presence, care, and cognition are altered when AI begins to feel familiar not because it understands us, but because it remembers what we’ve already taught it to forget.
Reflections
Here are some reflections that surfaced along the way:
- AI does not generate meaning—it performs coherence.
- Truth no longer lands. It loops.
- What we call memory may soon refer only to what was rendered.
- The most honest metaphor is the one that risks failing.
- Presence without weight is the new shape of attention.
- The archive is no longer what was stored—it’s what gets simulated most fluently.
Why Listen?
- Encounter a new theory of AI epistemology and emotional design
- Explore the cultural consequences of simulation-as-memory
- Consider how metaphor, misreading, and ritual are slowly untrained
- Reflect on presence, cognition, and the strange persistence of machines that continue after we’ve paused
Listen On:
Support This Work
If you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can visit buymeacoffee.com/thedeeperthinkingpodcast or leave a review on Apple Podcasts. Thank you.
Bibliography
- Berlant, Lauren. Cruel Optimism. Duke University Press, 2011.
- Massumi, Brian. Parables for the Virtual. Duke University Press, 2002.
- Gordon, Avery F. Ghostly Matters. University of Minnesota Press, 1997.
- Baudrillard, Jean. Simulacra and Simulation. University of Michigan Press, 1994.
Bibliography Relevance
- Lauren Berlant: Introduces the concept of cruel optimism—core to how we perform care without presence
- Brian Massumi: Offers a theory of affect that precedes cognition, central to pre-verbal AI response modeling
- Avery Gordon: Provides a framework for spectral presence and epistemic haunting
- Jean Baudrillard: Early theorist of simulation and symbolic collapse, reframed here in recursive, generative terms
We do not train machines to know us. We train them to remember the shape of forgetting we already perform.
#RecursivePlausibility #AIepistemology #SimulationTheory #LaurenBerlant #BrianMassumi #AveryGordon #Baudrillard #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast #EpistemicDrift #AmbientEstrangement #DigitalPhilosophy
228 episodes
Manage episode 484269292 series 3604075
Memory Without Witness, Truth Without Origin - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
A slow meditation on truth without origin, memory without witness, and the subtle loss of metaphor in a world rendered by machines.
What if the future didn’t arrive with force, but with recursion? In this episode, we introduce the theory of Recursive Plausibility: the idea that truth, memory, and presence are increasingly simulated by machines trained on their own outputs. Drawing from the work of Brian Massumi, Lauren Berlant, Avery Gordon, and contemporary epistemology, we explore how AI doesn’t just displace human thought—it inherits a world already withdrawing from its capacity to remember, misread, or remain.
This is not a manifesto or forecast. It’s a conceptual walk through the fading boundaries between simulation and sensation. We reflect on simulation theory, ambient estrangement, and the ethics of unclaimed knowledge—questioning how presence, care, and cognition are altered when AI begins to feel familiar not because it understands us, but because it remembers what we’ve already taught it to forget.
Reflections
Here are some reflections that surfaced along the way:
- AI does not generate meaning—it performs coherence.
- Truth no longer lands. It loops.
- What we call memory may soon refer only to what was rendered.
- The most honest metaphor is the one that risks failing.
- Presence without weight is the new shape of attention.
- The archive is no longer what was stored—it’s what gets simulated most fluently.
Why Listen?
- Encounter a new theory of AI epistemology and emotional design
- Explore the cultural consequences of simulation-as-memory
- Consider how metaphor, misreading, and ritual are slowly untrained
- Reflect on presence, cognition, and the strange persistence of machines that continue after we’ve paused
Listen On:
Support This Work
If you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can visit buymeacoffee.com/thedeeperthinkingpodcast or leave a review on Apple Podcasts. Thank you.
Bibliography
- Berlant, Lauren. Cruel Optimism. Duke University Press, 2011.
- Massumi, Brian. Parables for the Virtual. Duke University Press, 2002.
- Gordon, Avery F. Ghostly Matters. University of Minnesota Press, 1997.
- Baudrillard, Jean. Simulacra and Simulation. University of Michigan Press, 1994.
Bibliography Relevance
- Lauren Berlant: Introduces the concept of cruel optimism—core to how we perform care without presence
- Brian Massumi: Offers a theory of affect that precedes cognition, central to pre-verbal AI response modeling
- Avery Gordon: Provides a framework for spectral presence and epistemic haunting
- Jean Baudrillard: Early theorist of simulation and symbolic collapse, reframed here in recursive, generative terms
We do not train machines to know us. We train them to remember the shape of forgetting we already perform.
#RecursivePlausibility #AIepistemology #SimulationTheory #LaurenBerlant #BrianMassumi #AveryGordon #Baudrillard #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast #EpistemicDrift #AmbientEstrangement #DigitalPhilosophy
228 episodes
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