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📚 Cogitating Ceviche’s Week in Review (January 12–17, 2026)

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✒️ Editorial Summary

In a week that shuffled among ghosts—both divine and digital—the Cogitating Ceviché’s contributors peeled back the veils of modernity, faith, and fiction. Calista Freiheit reminded us that Christianity’s timelessness lies in its resistance to trend. Conrad Hannon explored the spectral residue of past futures in the cloud and the fading Americana hidden within Instagram’s algorithm. Gio Marron slipped from a mythic Conrad tale into the noir pulse of a Norwegian mystery, while Conrad T. Hannon revived William Blake as the prototype of the neglected genius. The week unspooled like a haunted reel, flickering between revelation and recursion.

đź“° Articles This Week

Why Christianity Is Inherently UnfashionableCalista F. Freiheit – January 12, 2026Christianity does not—and cannot—play catch-up with cultural fashion. Freiheit argues that its rootedness in the eternal makes it alien to every age, including ours.

The Ghost in the Server Farm: Hauntology in the CloudConrad Hannon – January 13, 2026A philosophical look at cloud computing through the lens of hauntology. What lingers in our digital archives? Ghosts, or glitches?

The Inn of the Two WitchesGio Marron – January 14, 2026Gio adapts Conrad’s lesser-known supernatural tale into a compact psychological fable—twilight shores, duplicitous hosts, and fate circling like seagulls.

William Blake: When Genius Was Not EnoughConrad T. Hannon – January 14, 2026The first in a series on overlooked brilliance, Hannon presents Blake not as a mystic oddity but as the casualty of a culture allergic to real vision.

The Last Great American Roadside Attraction: Instagram’s AlgorithmConrad Hannon – January 16, 2026Nostalgia, selfies, and saturation: Hannon investigates how digital platforms cannibalize Americana and turn ephemera into algorithmic detritus.

The Norwegian (Part II of VII)Gio Marron – January 17, 2026The mystery deepens in Marron’s noir serial. Mimi Delboise returns to uncover old crimes under new snow—one cigarette, one puzzle at a time.

🗣️ Quote of the Week

“Christianity is not behind the times; it is above them.”— Calista F. Freiheit, “Why Christianity Is Inherently Unfashionable”

âť“ Reflective Questions

Why Christianity Is Inherently Unfashionable

* Can timelessness coexist with cultural relevance?

* Is Christianity’s unfashionableness its strength or its stumbling block?

The Ghost in the Server Farm

* What exactly is haunting digital infrastructure—abandoned ideals or unrealized potential?

* Does “the cloud” replace or preserve memory?

The Inn of the Two Witches

* How does suspense operate differently in adaptation vs. original?

* What role does moral ambiguity play in maritime settings?

William Blake: When Genius Was Not Enough

* Why does modern culture often ignore its prophets?

* Is genius still viable without recognition?

The Last Great American Roadside Attraction

* Have algorithms destroyed or reinvented nostalgia?

* Is digital memory more fleeting or more permanent than physical keepsakes?

The Norwegian (Part II of VII)

* What does the setting reveal about the characters?

* How does serial form enhance or dilute mystery?

📚 Additional Resources

* The Myth of Progress by John Gray

* Spectres of Marx by Jacques Derrida

* The Society of the Spectacle by Guy Debord

* The Disappearance of Rituals by Byung-Chul Han

* Mystery and Manners by Flannery O’Connor

* Algorithms of Oppression by Safiya Umoja Noble

📣 Calls to Action

* Calista F. Freiheit: Share the article with someone who thinks religion should be more modern.

* Conrad Hannon: Upload your oldest photo to the cloud and ask: what ghost am I saving?

* Gio Marron: Read Conrad’s original “Two Witches” and spot the changes.

* Conrad T. Hannon: Nominate the next neglected genius for the Brilliant, But Not Enough series.

* General: Which article made you think hardest—and why? Drop a comment or forward it to a friend.

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



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