Cogitating Ceviché’s Week in Review (December 22–26)
Discussion via NotebookLM
Excerpt (Substack preview):From faith and formation to spreadsheets and satire, this week’s essays examined how modern systems—technical, cultural, and spiritual—shape the ways we think, work, and believe. Featuring Calista Freiheit on Christian storytelling, Conrad Hannon on digital liturgies, and Gio Marron on letters and gifts that outlast algorithms.
Tags: philosophy, culture, faith, literature, satire, technology, theology, Conrad Hannon, Calista Freiheit, Gio Marron
Editorial Summary
This week’s writing returned to a shared concern across genres and voices: how modern systems—technical, bureaucratic, and cultural—shape formation, meaning, and moral attention.
Calista Freiheit examined how algorithmic life weakens Christian formation by replacing shared narrative with optimization. Conrad Hannon approached modernity through satire and philosophy, treating the spreadsheet as liturgy and revisiting Plato’s Cave under streaming conditions. Gio Marron grounded the week with literary clarity, presenting letters and short fiction that resist speed and abstraction in favor of human cost and gift.
Across essays, satire, and fiction, the week asked a single question: what forms us when efficiency replaces story?
This Week’s Articles
Why Christians Need Stories, Not Algorithms — Formation Happens Through Narrative, Not Notification
Calista Freiheit — December 22, 2025
A careful critique of digital formation, arguing that Christian moral life depends on shared stories rather than personalized feeds.
The Spreadsheet as Sacred Text — On the Liturgy of the Modern Office
Conrad Hannon — December 23, 2025
A satirical meditation on bureaucracy, treating metrics, dashboards, and KPIs as devotional objects of late modern work life.
The Letters — by Lucy Maud Montgomery
Gio Marron — December 23, 2025
A literary presentation foregrounding intimacy, memory, and the slow discipline of correspondence.
Conrad T. Hannon — December 24, 2025
A reflective portrait of a satirist who used humor not to escape seriousness, but to expose it.
Plato’s Cave with Wi-Fi — Philosophy in the Age of Streaming
Conrad Hannon — December 25, 2025
A contemporary reading of Plato’s Cave, reframed through algorithmic curation, passive spectatorship, and digital comfort.
The Gift of the Magi — by O. Henry
Gio Marron — December 26, 2025
A seasonal return to sacrifice, love, and irony—reminding readers that value is rarely measurable.
Quote of the Week
“Formation requires a shared story, not a personalized feed.”— Calista Freiheit, Why Christians Need Stories, Not Algorithms
Questions for Reflection
Why Christians Need Stories, Not Algorithms
* What once formed belief that digital habits now displace?
* Can formation survive personalization?
* What is lost when formation becomes efficient?
The Spreadsheet as Sacred Text
* What rituals govern modern work life?
* When does measurement replace judgment?
* What does satire reveal that critique alone cannot?
The Letters
* What disciplines does letter-writing require?
* How does delay shape meaning?
* What forms of attention disappear with speed?
Joachim Ringelnatz
* Why does satire endure under pressure?
* What makes absurdity truthful?
* How does humor function as resistance?
Plato’s Cave with Wi-Fi
* How does streaming alter perception?
* What replaces truth when comfort dominates?
* Is escape still possible?
The Gift of the Magi
* Why is sacrifice often misunderstood?
* What cannot be optimized?
* What makes a gift meaningful?
Additional Reading
* Plato, Republic (Book VII)
* Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death
* Wendell Berry, The Unsettling of America
* Jacques Ellul, The Technological Society
* O. Henry, Selected Short Stories
Calls to Action
* Calista Freiheit: Reclaim shared practices that resist personalization.
* Conrad Hannon: Read satire slowly; it sharpens judgment.
* Gio Marron: Return to letters, stories, and forms that require patience.
* General: Share one piece this week with someone who values thought over speed.
Thank you for your time today. Until next time, stay gruntled, curious, and God Bless.