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I Am; Therefore I Think: Consciousness and Humanity in the Age of AI
Posted by Literary Titan

JP Pulcini’s I Am; Therefore I Think is a reflective and wide-ranging meditation on consciousness, identity, memory, mortality, and artificial intelligence, written less as a rigid thesis than as a guided walk through the author’s own questions. The book begins in the intimate territory of early memory and wonder, then moves through Descartes, Nagel, Chalmers, neuroscience, science fiction, simulation theory, transhumanism, and the ethics of AI, always returning to one central conviction: whatever machines may eventually imitate, human consciousness still seems bound up with lived experience, meaning, and the stubborn inwardness of a self. What gives the book its shape is that recurring movement from abstraction back to life itself, from Lascaux cave paintings to Blade Runner, from memory as data to memory as felt history, and finally to mortality as the force that gives existence its urgency.
Pulcini is at his best when he stops trying to sound like a referee in a philosophical debate and instead sounds like a person genuinely wrestling with what it means to be here at all. The early pages about childhood warmth and wonder have a quiet grace to them, and later, when he argues that AI can simulate intelligence but cannot inhabit it, the book finds its emotional center. I found myself especially taken by his insistence that memory isn’t just stored content but something saturated with feeling, authorship, and private texture. His beach-sand comparison, modest as it is, works because it makes the larger claim tangible. That same gift shows up in his reading of Blade Runner against The Matrix, where he argues that consciousness is not just perception manipulated from the outside, but meaning shaped from within. Those are the moments when the book stops being merely thoughtful and becomes affecting.
There are stretches where the synthesis of philosophy, pop culture, theology, futurism, and personal reflection feels genuinely rich. This isn’t a cold, academic book. It wants to keep the mystery intact while still thinking hard around its edges. The writing is often plainspoken rather than dazzling, yet it has a steadiness that suits the material, and when Pulcini turns to mortality, grief, and the danger of pursuing technological perfection at the cost of human presence, the book gathers real moral weight.
This is a thoughtful and deeply felt book. It reminds me that our most urgent questions about AI are still, underneath it all, questions about the soul of human life: what we remember, what we love, what we lose, what we fear, and why any of it matters. Its final mood is not triumphalist or apocalyptic, but tenderly cautionary, asking us to carry our tools forward without surrendering the fragile, mortal selves that made those tools in the first place. I’d recommend it to readers who enjoy philosophy written for thoughtful generalists, especially people drawn to books that live somewhere between cultural criticism, existential reflection, and accessible writing about AI.
Pages: 313 | ASIN : B0GRMQ945F
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: AI & Machine Learning, AI and Semantics, artificial intelligence, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Computer Science, Computers and Technology, ebook, free will and determinism, goodreads, Humanism Philosophy, I Am Therefore I Think, indie author, JP Pulcini, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Philosophy Metaphysics, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing
Governance in the Quantum Era
Posted by Literary-Titan

Quantularity: A Quantum Framework for the Human Experience challenges the theory of Singularity by hypothesizing that, instead of one super-intelligence consuming everything, there is a world where many minds —human, artificial, cultural, and even biological —intertwine without collapsing into sameness. Where did the idea for this book come from?
The idea for Quantularity emerged from years of questioning whether the dominant narrative of Singularity truly captures the future we are heading toward. Ray Kurzweil’s vision of one all-consuming super-intelligence felt incomplete. I began exploring an alternative, a framework where many minds, whether human, artificial, cultural, or even biological, remain distinct yet interconnected. Instead of collapsing into sameness, they amplify one another through entanglement. That seed of thought became the foundation for this book.
In your book, you cover philosophy to technology to governance, weaving stories of history, myth, neuroscience, and quantum theory into a vision that feels both speculative and strangely practical. How did you approach researching this book, and what was your process for compiling it?
My research was intentionally multidisciplinary. I drew from neuroscience (especially work on the neocortex), philosophy of mind, cultural studies, and quantum physics. I also leaned heavily into myth, religion, and history. I believe meaning arises at the intersections. The process itself was nonlinear, much like the ideas I write about. I journaled, drafted essays, debated with colleagues, and mapped connections across fields until a coherent framework emerged. The writing then became an act of stitching these threads together into a narrative that feels both visionary and grounded.
What were some ideas that were important for you to share in this book?
Several core ideas guided me:
That cooperation and entanglement, not domination, are the forces driving the next chapter of human and technological evolution.
That consciousness is not limited to humans or machines, but can emerge across networks, cultures, and even ecosystems.
That governance in the quantum era must be decentralized, transparent, and adaptive, designed for multiplicity, not centralization.
And most importantly, that our humanity is not diminished by technology. Instead, it can be expanded if we build with intention.
What is one thing that you hope readers take away from Quantularity?
I want readers to leave with a sense of possibility. We do not have to accept a future of either machine domination or human obsolescence. Instead, we can imagine and design a world where multiplicity thrives, where diversity of thought and being is preserved, and where our interconnectedness becomes a source of resilience and creativity.
Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Website | Amazon
In Quantularity: A Quantum Framework for the Human Experience, visionary thinker and technologist John Wingate dismantles the myth of the Singularity—that moment when artificial intelligence eclipses human thought—and offers a bold alternative: a future where intelligence doesn’t converge into one mind, but expands into many. A future defined not by domination, but by connection.
Spanning quantum physics, AI, distributed systems, neuroscience, and spirituality, this groundbreaking book explores the emergence of a new kind of consciousness—layered, networked, and co-created between humans and machines. Wingate weaves deep science with poetic insight, challenging readers to rethink intelligence, identity, value, and the very architecture of reality.
Inside, you’ll explore:
Why the Singularity is a flawed and incomplete vision of the future
How consciousness may be fractal, recursive, and quantum in nature
The role of AI as a mirror—not a master—of human dreams
How distributed ledgers can serve as society’s new trust fabric
The shift from scarcity economics to coherence economics
New models of education, governance, and collective memory
Why choice—not control—is the foundation of reality’s unfolding
This isn’t science fiction. It’s a blueprint for what’s already emerging.
With 20 thought-provoking chapters, Quantularity is a guide for leaders, technologists, spiritual seekers, and anyone who senses that something deeper is awakening in our relationship with intelligence—human or otherwise.
Wingate calls us to remember that we are not passive travelers in this next era. We are co-creators, resonant nodes in a conscious, evolving universe. As we move beyond mechanistic systems into fields of entangled awareness, the most important question isn’t “Will AI surpass us?”—it’s “Who do we become when we remember what we are?”
Whether you’re a futurist, founder, developer, or philosopher, Quantularity offers a bold new lens—and a call to action.
This is not the end of our story.
This is the beginning of our remembering.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: AI & Machine Learning, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Computer Science, ebook, goodreads, indie author, John Wingate, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, physics, Quantularity: A Quantum Framework for the Human Experience, read, reader, reading, story, technology, writer, writing




