đŠ Do you recommend an AI book that's not yet in our library? Email suggest-a-book@cybercanon.org
#Cybersecurity #ArtificialIntelligence #AI #AISecurity #DeepReading
đŠ Do you recommend an AI book that's not yet in our library? Email suggest-a-book@cybercanon.org
#Cybersecurity #ArtificialIntelligence #AI #AISecurity #DeepReading
I donât consider myself "smart," just deeply curious. Iâve spent years revisiting the same works in science and Scripture because, as Mortimer Adler said, being "well-read" is about depth, not just volume. Like my friend Robert Weyer used to say, true learning takes time. đâ¨
#DeepReading #LifelongLearning #Philosophy #WellRead #BiblicalStudies #SciFi
The Deep Dark Terroir of the Soul
This is the third and final part of the Thicket Series:
Part 1: Logic of the Thicket and the Unsearchable Web
Part 2: The Architecture of Resistance
The history of the working subject might be best understood not as a ledger of wages or a sequence of industrial breakthroughs, but as a study in the migration of the Master. In the eighteenth century, the Master was a concrete presence, a figure residing in the castle or the cathedral, distinct from the worker by a physical and social chasm. One knew where the authority lived because one could see the smoke from its chimneys. By the nineteenth century, this figure had moved into the factory office, closer to the rhythm of the machine but still identifiable by the suit and the watch. The twentieth century saw a further dissolution; the Master became atmospheric, blending into the very walls of the institutions that housed usâthe schools, the hospitals, the barracks.
And yet, it is in the twenty-first century that we witness the final and perhaps most unsettling migration. The Master has moved inside. It has taken up residence within the workerâs own mind, adopting the voice of the ego and the language of self-optimization. This internal migration has fundamentally altered the nature of exhaustion, shifting it from the physical depletion of the muscle to a profound infarction of the soul. To understand how we might resist such an intimate occupation, we must trace the lineage of this fatigue, moving from Voltaireâs eighteenth-century refuge of the Garden to the contemporary diagnosis of the Burnout Society, and finally, to an emerging architecture of resistance that might be called the Logic of the Thicket.
Felsenlandschaft im Elbsandsteingebirge Caspar David Friedrich1822/1823The story begins in 1759, amid the wreckage of a world governed by grand, often violent, narratives. When Voltaire published Candide, the prevailing philosophical mood was one of forced optimism. Leibniz had posited that we lived in âthe best of all possible worlds,â a claim that felt increasingly like a cruel joke to those living through the arbitrary brutalities of the eraâthe Lisbon earthquake, the Seven Yearsâ War, and the relentless inquisitions of both church and state. For the subject of the 1700s, the Master was external and undeniable. Life was a sequence of calamities administered from above.
In the final pages of Candide, after a lifetime spent traversing a world of rape, slavery, and disaster in search of Leibnizian meaning, the protagonist reaches a quiet, radical conclusion. He rejects the grand debates and the lofty theorizing of his companions with a simple, grounded imperative: Il faut cultiver notre jardinâwe must cultivate our garden.
At this historical juncture, the Garden was more than a hobby; it was a strategy of containment. It served as a physical and psychological wall against a world that had grown too chaotic to manage. Voltaire suggested that simple, manual labor was the only effective shield against the primary threats of the human condition, which he identified as the Three Evils: Boredom, Vice, and Need. In the Garden, work was a form of retreat. It solved the problem of Need by providing physical sustenanceâpotatoes and produceâat a time when biological survival was never guaranteed. It addressed Boredom by occupying the hands and the mind with the repetitive, rhythmic care of the earth, saving the worker from the existential dread of idleness. And it warded off Vice by providing a sanctuary from the moral decay of the court and the city, replacing political intrigue with the honest friction of the soil.
The Garden was a place of safety because it was bounded. To work was to narrow oneâs world to the reach of oneâs own hands, creating a small, controllable private sphere where the Masterâs voice was, for a moment, silenced by the sounds of the harvest.
However, this sanctuary could not withstand the arrival of the steam engine. As the nineteenth century progressed, the Garden was paved over by the Factory. The peasantry was pulled from the land and funneled into the burgeoning cities, where the nature of labor underwent a violent transformation. Karl Marx, observing this shift, identified the collapse of Voltaireâs dream. In the industrial setting, the worker could no longer cultivate a garden because they owned neither the seeds nor the harvest. They did not even own their own time.
This was the era of Coercion. Marxâs diagnosis of Alienation described a worker severed from the product of their labor, from the act of production, and from their own Gattungswesen, species-essence. The Master was now the Capitalist, and exhaustion was a physical realityâa depletion of calories and muscle. Resistance, accordingly, was also physical: the strike, the riot, the seizure of the machine. The goal was to reclaim the physical Garden that had been stolen.
As we moved into the twentieth century, the nature of control shifted again. Physical coercion, while effective, was inefficient; it bred visible resentment and the constant threat of revolution. Systemic power realized it was far more effective to train workers to police themselves. Michel Foucault described this as the Disciplinary Society, where the factory model was replicated across all social institutions. The governing logic became the Panopticonâthe internalized gaze. The worker of this era was a docile body, governed by the operating verb Should. You should be on time; you should follow procedure. While the Master was becoming more abstractâa set of norms rather than a man in a tall hatâthe enemy was still technically outside. There was still a door one could walk through at the end of a shift.
The true transformation occurred at the turn of the twenty-first century, a transition captured with clinical precision by Byung-Chul Han. Han argues that the Disciplinary Society has collapsed, replaced by the Achievement Society. The modal verb has shifted from Should to Can. The demand is no longer âYou must obey,â but âYes, you can.â
This shift has proven catastrophic for the psyche. In the old world of coercion, there was a limit; when the shift was over, the worker was, in a sense, free. But in the Achievement Society, the worker is an âentrepreneur of the self.â We are no longer exploited by an external boss so much as we exploit ourselves. We voluntarily work eighty hours a week not because of a threat of the lash, but because of a desire to âoptimizeâ our personal brands and âreach our potential.â
The Master has completed its migration. We carry the Panopticon in our pockets and in our egos. In this state, the Garden is no longer a retreat; it has become a performance stage. We still cultivate, but we do so frantically, documenting the process for the digital gaze, tracking our productivity metrics, and feeling a gnawing guilt that our harvest isnât as aesthetic or impactful as our neighborâs. The boundary between the private and the public has dissolved into a smooth, legible âsearchableâ surface.
In this environment of total transparency, the Three Evils have mutated into contemporary monsters. Need is no longer about physical starvation; it has become Status Anxietyâthe insatiable requirement for recognition and digital legibility. Boredom has been replaced by Hyper-Attention; we are never idle, but we are never at rest, trapped in a shallow, frantic multitasking that Han calls the âvice of the click.â And Vice itself has become Self-Exploitationâthe auto-aggression of working oneself into a depression under the guise of self-fulfillment.
By 2024, the smoothness of our digital existence had become total. Silicon Valley had successfully turned the world into a frictionless landscape where data and capital flow without resistance. Algorithms now manage the Uber driver and the freelance coder alike, using gamification to nudge behavior through a mathematical black box. We have become Tourists in a digital world built by others, wandering through clean, well-lit interfaces that prioritize searchability, SEO, above all else. If a thing is legible, it can be indexed; if it is indexed, it can be exploited.
This brings us to the threshold of 2025 and the emerging response found in the Logic of the Thicket. If the Garden was a strategy of containment and the Factory was a site of coercion, the Thicket is a strategy of opacity.
A thicket is not a garden. It is messy, dense, and difficult to navigate. It does not possess the neat rows or the clear boundaries of Voltaireâs refuge. Instead, it is defined by friction. To resist the smoothness of the modern Achievement Society, the worker must transition from being a Tourist to being an Explorer. The Tourist consumes intelligibilityâthe ease of the app, the clarity of the interface. The Explorer, by contrast, generates place through the introduction of friction.
The Logic of the Thicket suggests that we cannot return to the eighteenth-century Garden. The walls are too brittle; databases will index the soil and an AI will recommend the fertilizer before the first seed is planted. Instead, the modern subject must create contexts that are unsearchable. This does not mean a total withdrawal from the world, but rather an engagement on terms that are too complex, too local, and too nuanced for an algorithm to easily optimize.
We might re-examine Voltaireâs Three Evils through the lens of this new architecture to see if the Thicket offers a viable path forward.
First, consider the evil of Need. In our current context, Need has become the fear of Irrelevance. In a smooth world, the worker is a standard, interchangeable part. If your work is legibleâeasy to measure and automateâyou live in constant fear of economic obsolescence. This is the condition of the smooth professional: the software engineer whose code is indistinguishable from the output of a Large Language Model, the copywriter producing content that mirrors a thousand other blog posts, or the middle manager whose primary function is the transmission of standardized project plans. These roles are vulnerable because they lack friction; they offer no resistance to the efficiency of the machine.
The Thicket addresses this through the concept of Terroir. In the culinary world, terroir refers to the specific qualities of soil, climate, and tradition that give a wine or a cheese its unreplicable character. In the world of labor, terroir is the infusion of oneâs work with local context, historical depth, and human idiosyncrasy.
For this blog, the terroir is found in the deliberate, often difficult work of communal deep-reading and historical synthesis. Here, history is not viewed as a sequence of headlines, but as a series of vast, slow-moving machinesâintellectual contraptions that take centuries to build and even longer to fully start. By examining the past through this mechanical lens, the thinker begins to see the world not as a âsmoothâ stream of current events, but as a dense thicket of long-term trajectories.
The process behind this blogâreading deep into difficult texts, engaging in exhaustive discussions with other thinkers, and synthesizing these influences through a deliberate collaboration with artificial intelligenceâis itself a âthickâ form of labor. It is a method of finalizing thought that creates a durable value, one that cannot be mimicked by a prompt-engineered shortcut. By making your work âthickââladen with specific references, local nuances, and the friction of deep thoughtâyou make yourself un-automatable. The machine can navigate a smooth database, but it struggles to traverse a thicket of idiosyncratic human insights that are anchored in the deep time of historical machinery. The Thicket ensures survival not by making the worker more efficient, but by making them indispensable through their unique, unsearchable âfriction.â
Next, the evil of Boredom has mutated into Passive Consumption. We are over-stimulated but spiritually idle, doom-scrolling through a world where nothing we do actually changes the environment. We are Tourists in the digital landscape, consuming the âintelligibilityâ of others. The Thicket solves this by demanding active navigation. In a world where algorithms predict what we want before we know it, the Thicket reintroduces the struggle of discovery. You cannot be âboredâ when you are bushwhacking through a complex structure of your own making, or when you are trying to understand the slow grinding of a historical machine that began its first revolution centuries ago. The joy of the Thicket is the joy of the Explorerâthe realization that the landscape is resisting you, and that you must exert agency to move through it.
Finally, Vice has become Algorithmic Complicityâthe moral laziness of letting an interface decide who we speak to, what we read, and how we spend our time. It is the vice of âdisindividuation,â allowing ourselves to be smoothed down into a demographic data point. The Thicket forces a return to Virtue through Agency. To build a thicket is to refuse to be effortlessly âknown.â It requires the âvirtueâ of privacy and the patience of shared inquiry. A ânetworkâ is smooth; you connect with a click. A âcommunityâ is a thicket; it requires negotiation, trust, and the willingness to engage with the âmessinessâ of other people. It requires the slow effort to inhabit a text that refuses to be summarized by an executive summary or a bulleted list.
The journey from 1759 to 2025 is a circle that does not quite close. Voltaireâs worker fled the violence of kings into the Garden, seeking a physical retreat. Marxâs worker lost that garden and fought to reclaim the tools. Hanâs worker internalized the factory, turning their own mind into a sweatshop of positivity. And the worker of 2025 now realizes that the mind itself has been mapped.
The only remaining escape is to leave the Gardenâwhich has become a trap of transparencyâand enter the Thicket. There is a critical difference here: the Garden was intended to be safe, but the Thicket is defensive. It is a posture for a hostile territory. It saves us from Boredom by making life difficult again. It saves us from Vice by requiring conscious choice rather than algorithmic default. And it saves us from Need by ensuring we remain human enough that the machines cannot find a way to replace the specific texture of our presence.
It is a harder path than the one Candide chose, but in a world where the Master lives in the code, it may be the only path left. The mandate for the contemporary soul is no longer simply to cultivate, but to grow something so dense and so deeply rooted that the algorithm, for all its processing power, simply cannot find the way in. We look toward the edge of the woods, not for a way out, but for a way to disappear into the depth of the growth.
Coda: The Machinery of the Thicket
This essay is not merely a reflection on labor; it is a byproduct of the very âLogic of the Thicketâ it describes. To write it was to engage in a form of âthickâ laborâa deliberate resistance to the high-speed, surface-level synthesis typical of the Achievement Society. Below is the intellectual architecture and the process that generated this piece.
The Conceptual Bedrock
The essayâs trajectory is built on a specific lineage of thinkers who have tracked the migration of power from the town square into the central nervous system:
The Process: Generating âTerroirâ
The writing of this piece followed a âthickâ methodology designed to avoid the âsmoothâ output of standard digital content:
The Goal: The Unsearchable Life
The ultimate aim of this âCodaâ is to encourage the reader to see their own intellectual life as a Terroir. The âMaster in the codeâ thrives on standardized, legible data. By engaging in deep history, difficult synthesis, and private creation, you grow a thicket. You become a âplaceâ that is too complex for a map, a subject that is too dense for an algorithm, and a worker whose exhaustion is finally, once again, your own.
#AchievementSociety #AI #AlgorithmicComplicity #Alienation #Art #artificialIntelligence #Automation #BurnoutSociety #ByungChulHan #Candide #CriticalTheory #CulturalCritique #DeepDarkTerroir #DeepReading #DigitalSmoothness #DigitalThicket #Enlightenment #Friction #HistoricalMachinery #history #HistoryOfLabor #HumanAgency #InfarctionOfTheSoul #KarlMarx #LLMs #MichelFoucault #Opacity #philosophy #PostDigital #Resistance #SelfOptimization #SlowWeb #SpeciesEssence #SpeculativeNonFiction #SystemsTheory #Technodiversity #technology #TheDisciplinarySociety #TheExplorerVsTheTourist #TheGarden #TheMaster #ThePanopticon #Unsearchable #Voltaire #writing #YukHui
đ We're involuntarily training our brains for skimming... and losing something essential in the process.
I wrote about how deep reading is our most powerful answer to cognitive superficiality. It's not just about informationâit's a practice that literally reshapes our neural circuits, trains empathy through fiction, challenges our fundamental values, and teaches us "serious noticingâ.
đď¸ Podcast-Tipp:
Prof. Peter Gerjets war am 6.11. zum Thema đ "Deep Reading - Warum vertieftes Lesen immer noch wichtig istâ in der Reihe "Quarks - Wissenschaft und mehr" (WDR 5 ) zu Gast.
Zur Aufnahme:âĄď¸ https://www1.wdr.de/mediathek/audio/wdr5/quarks/index.html
#DeepReading #Lesen #Schule #Studium #FediLZ #KI #Psychologie
Books improve focus. In a distracted world, reading trains your brain to concentrate.
#DeepReading #MindfulReading
- I'm not looking for viral wisdom.
- I lose interest when I find a pitch or a sermon or a buzz phrase in their writings.
- I value slow words, honest tone, no agenda.
- No âshoulds,â no marketing glow.
- I'd like to read just items by people observing, thinking, writing quietly.
#SlowWeb #LoFiThinking #DigitalGarden #IndieWeb #DeepReading
So interessant, diese Sendung. Ca. 50% unserer SuS von heute (Kolleginnen und Kollegen von morgen) kĂśnnen keine komplexeren Zeitungsartikel mehr lesen. Woher das kommt, wie sich das äuĂert und was es fĂźr Bildung und Demokratie bedeutet:
Aus der Dlf App | Kulturfragen | Leseforscher | Leseforscher â Dicke BĂźcher lesen im Literaturstudium ist vorbei
https://share.deutschlandradio.de/dlf-audiothek-audio-teilen.html?audio_id=dira_BD91ED6AAD1311F07C11B883034C2FA0
Off The Screen, Into The Book
A Practical Essay for Writers Who Miss #DeepReading
https://medium.com/p/05b20da9bacf
Wendy Van Camp has published an essay on #Medium about how deep reading can enhance your life and make you a better #writer
"After a brief dalliance with literacy, humanity is returning to its oral roots."
Not sure I go along with all the arguments here, but it's a considered essay on deep reading vs "digital orality" (paywall currently removed):
https://www.vox.com/politics/414049/reading-books-decline-tiktok-oral-culture
#reading #literacy #essays #communication #DeepReading #orality #politics #WalterOng #internet #politics
đ New piece:
"Why Most Overthinkers Are Secret Visionaries"
Not every loop is a trap.
Some minds are maps.
đ https://medium.com/@saadeaalars
#Mediumwriters #Deepreading #Mindverse
Skimming, scanning, scrolling might save time, but what are they doing to your cognitive ability? Miha KovaÄ via @revijarazpotja.bsky.social and Wespennest on #deepreading and analytical thinkingâs pertinence to #democracy.
Gleich im #Radio : "Deep Reading statt KI: Warum es wichtig ist, lange Texte zu lesen" um 14:05h bei #campus und #Karriere auf #Deutschlandfunk
Menschen, besonders die, die an einer #Hochschule arbeiten, kennen das Problem: Texte werden nicht gelesen, sondern per sogenannter #KI konsumiert
Was fĂźr Konsequenzen das fĂźr das Hirn hat, ist Thema in der Sendung des #DLF
#deepreading #brainrot #Bildung #Denken
@tante Wir hatten es doch schon Ăśfter von dem Thema ;)
How many of these have you read? How many of these did you understand?
The Most Misunderstood #Books Ever WrittenâAnd What They Really Mean
https://buff.ly/2sDALO3
#classics #literature #reading #amreading #deepreading #writing #amweriting
đ Deep Reading als Habit? So gelingt es.
Nach meinem Beitrag zu den kognitiven Vorteilen des Lesens vor ein paar Wochen wurde ich mehrmals gefragt: Wie lässt sich vertieftes, tägliches Lesen im Alltag verankern?
Drei Strategien haben sich fßr mich bewährt:
1ď¸âŁ Thematisch lesen: Mehrere BĂźcher zu einem Thema fĂśrdern Verständnis und Analyse (Cluster Reading).
2ď¸âŁ Lesen als Training: Feste Zeiten, kein Zähl-Ziel â Fokus auf Konzentration statt Quantität.
3ď¸âŁ Ablenkungen reduzieren: Smartphone weg, Leseort wählen, bekannte Musik allenfalls im Hintergrund.
Deep Reading ist fĂźr mich heute ein tägliches Ritual geworden â und ein wirksamer Gegenpol zu den Mechanismen digitaler ReizĂśkonomie. Eine Medizin gegen den Brain Drain.
đ Mehr dazu im neuen Blogbeitrag (mit alles wissenschaftlichen Quellen):
https://text.tchncs.de/gisiger/wie-du-erfolgreich-deep-reading-als-habit-etablieren-kannst
âąď¸ Zeitdruck und volle To-Do-Listen? Am 09. und 10.04.25 lernst du im Seminar, wie du trotz Infoflut effizient liest und Inhalte langfristig behältst. đ Melde dich an: https://www.projektmagazin.de/seminare-events/deep-reading-schneller-klueger-und-nachhaltiger-lesen-0
âąď¸ Zeitdruck und volle To-Do-Listen? Am 09. und 10.04.25 lernst du im Seminar, wie du trotz Infoflut effizient liest und Inhalte langfristig behältst. đ Melde dich an: https://www.projektmagazin.de/seminare-events/deep-reading-schneller-klueger-und-nachhaltiger-lesen-0
In a world that rushes, my new poetry collection stands still. Dive into long fantasy poems that reward patience and contemplation. #FantasyPoetry #DeepReading
http://scottandrewbailey.com/2024/06/02/take-time-escape-and-contemplate/
Recommended listening:
The Ezra Klein Show
Ezra Klein in conversation with Maryanne Wolf on Deep Reading.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/22/opinion/ezra-klein-podcast-maryanne-wolf.html?
Maryanne Wolf is the author of âReader, Come Home: The Reading Brain in a Digital World'
https://www.harpercollins.com/products/reader-come-home-maryanne-wolf?variant=32128334594082
Just browsing, thanks
Skimming, scanning, scrolling, click
Too long, didnât read
#TheEzraKleinShow #EzraKlein #MaryanneWolf #DeepReading #Reading #Empathy
'..that #BookReading âunderstimulates the sensesâ.. makes the activity so..rewarding. By allowing us to filter out distractions, to quiet the problem-solving functions of the frontal lobes, #DeepReading becomes a form of #DeepThinking. The mind of the experienced book reader is a calm mind..[with] the firing of our neurons, itâs a mistake to assume that more is better. ' In #TheShallows #NicolasCarr makes me think of #KurtVonnegut writing that reading books is the Western form of meditation.