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July 1, 2025 22 mins

Permission and Surrender. When the Question Disappears

The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated 

For those asking not what AI is—but what it unmakes in us.

This episode traces the collapse of explanation into fluency. Not because language has failed—but because its pauses have. As generative AI grows more conversational, more anticipatory, we examine the moral and cognitive costs of a world where nothing resists being answered. We explore how retrieval replaces memory, how responsiveness displaces reflection, and how trust, increasingly, is engineered rather than earned. Referencing moral psychology, epistemic friction, and interface critique, we attend to what thinking no longer feels like when AI completes it for you.

This is not about resisting AI—it’s about remembering ourselves inside its grammar. With insights from Iris Murdoch, Bernard Williams, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and Richard Rorty—alongside practitioners like Simon Willison, Margaret Mitchell, Ted Chiang, and Helen Toner—this episode asks what remains when hesitation disappears, and conscience is replaced by completion.

Not all intelligence argues. Some of it anticipates. That changes everything.

Reflections

  • The point is not to resist technology—but to resist forgetting what thought feels like without it.
  • Not all speed is progress. Some of it is disappearance.
  • Alignment without conscience is just instruction without memory.
  • We’re not just outsourcing thinking. We’re outsourcing the demand for it.
  • To be helpful is not to be honest. To be fluent is not to be wise.
  • When we stop misfiring, we stop noticing the target was never ours.
  • What we no longer need to remember may be what once made us human.

Why Listen?

  • To trace how answers become atmosphere, not articulation
  • To hear how ChatGPT-5 affects not just work—but self-understanding
  • To think alongside Murdoch, Wittgenstein, Chiang, and Toner—without turning them into content
  • To pause long enough to feel what’s being displaced, not just what’s being delivered

Listen On:

Extended Bibliography 

  • Ellul, Jacques. The Technological Society. Translated by John Wilkinson. New York: Vintage Books, 1964. Link
  • Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Translated by Alan Sheridan. New York: Pantheon Books, 1977. Link
  • Han, Byung-Chul. The Transparency Society. Translated by Erik Butler. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2015. Link
  • Heidegger, Martin. The Question Concerning Technology and
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