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🐟 Cogitating Ceviche’s Week in Review (Dec 29–Jan 3)

Discussion via NotebookLM

📝 Editorial Summary

This week, we explored the uneasy friction between permanence and disposability, the secret life of your kitchen appliances, and the ghostly hands shaping modern thought. Calista F. Freiheit called Christians to resist throwaway culture. Conrad T. Hannon unearthed the intellectual legacies behind the “average man” and the modern pamphleteer. And Gio Marron returned to Tolstoy’s moral minimalism. A week of quietly sharp ideas.

📚 This Week’s Articles

The Virtue of PermanenceCalista F. Freiheit – December 29, 2025A meditation on Christian faith, the beauty of stability, and why building for eternity matters in a world obsessed with the new.

Why Your Smart Fridge Is Plotting Against YouConrad Hannon – December 30, 2025A short sermon on optimization and betrayal. A smart home, Hannon warns, may still be a dumb idea.

A Lost OpportunityGio Marron – December 31, 2025Tolstoy’s brief fable of hesitation and loss. What we fail to do may echo longer than our actions.

Adolphe Quetelet: Inventing the Average ManConrad T. Hannon – December 31, 2025The first in a new series—The Architects of the Invisible. Who decides what “normal” means? It may start with Quetelet.

Pamphleteers, Substacks, and the Long War Over AttentionConrad Hannon – January 2, 2026Newsletters are older than you think. Hannon tracks the lineage from 18th-century coffeehouses to your inbox.

The CandleGio Marron – January 3, 2026Another Tolstoy tale—this time about the small light of moral courage, and the ease with which it’s snuffed out.

🗣️ Quote of the Week

“The modern home has been optimized for everything but truth.”— Conrad Hannon, Why Your Smart Fridge Is Plotting Against You

❓ Questions to Consider

The Virtue of Permanence

* What does permanence demand of us?

* Can faith thrive in a culture designed to discard?

Why Your Smart Fridge Is Plotting Against You

* Are our devices optimizing us in return?

* When does convenience become complicity?

A Lost Opportunity

* Is passivity a moral failing?

* What actions have you avoided that still haunt you?

Adolphe Quetelet: Inventing the Average Man

* Can we think statistically without becoming inhuman?

* Who benefits when “the average” defines the norm?

Pamphleteers, Substacks, and the Long War Over Attention

* Is independent publishing a revival—or a rebranding?

* Has the attention economy always existed?

The Candle

* What small acts keep your integrity alive?

* Have you ever looked away when you should have acted?

📎 Additional Reading

* Amusing Ourselves to Death – Neil Postman

* Technopoly – Neil Postman

* The Technological Society – Jacques Ellul

* The Gospel in a Pluralist Society – Lesslie Newbigin

* The Invisible Gorilla – Christopher Chabris & Daniel Simons

* The Ethics of Authenticity – Charles Taylor

📣 Calls to Action

Calista F. Freiheit: Consider what in your life you treat as temporary that may deserve permanence.Conrad Hannon: Turn off one smart device for a week and note the difference.Gio Marron: Read a Tolstoy story out loud. His prose carries different weight aloud.Everyone: Share one article with someone who wouldn’t normally read it.

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



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