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The Question That Changes Everything
Posted by Literary-Titan

As artificial intelligence advances toward human-like thought, you explore in your book, I Am; Therefore I Think, whether true consciousness lies not in thinking, but in the fragile, emotional experience of being alive. What first pushed you to ask not “Can AI think?” but “Can AI experience?”
For most of human history, intelligence and consciousness were assumed to be the same thing. To think was to be aware, to reason was to experience, and the two were inseparable because there was only one example of intelligence we could observe: the human mind.
AI broke that assumption open.
When I watched these systems write essays, compose music, and answer complex questions—faster and more efficiently than people—something still felt fundamentally different. They generate language, but they do not experience meaning.
That’s when the real question emerged. Not “Can AI think?” — we already know the answer. But “Can AI experience?” That’s the question that changes everything.
You argue that intelligence and consciousness are not the same. Where do you think most people conflate the two?
The moment a machine gives a surprising answer.
There’s something deeply human about projecting inner life onto things that perform well — and AI performs extraordinarily well, so we assume the interior must match the output.
But for the first time in history, we can observe intelligence operating without consciousness. AI does not grow up, does not experience the world through a body, does not accumulate memory through lived time, and does not feel the consequences of its actions. It processes information— nothing more.
That contrast forces a deeper question. If intelligence can be engineered, perhaps consciousness is something else entirely. Not a product of computation, but of experience. A life lived in the world. And that difference may matter more than we currently understand.
You emphasize memory as something lived, not stored. How does emotional memory shape identity differently from factual recall?
Factual recall is retrieval. Emotional memory is formation.
You can store the date your father died— that’s data. But the way that loss reshapes how you love, how you measure time, how you understand your own mortality—that isn’t stored anywhere. It lives in you. It became you.
Human consciousness develops through experience—through memory, emotion, embodiment, and time. AI has none of that. Memory without consequence is just information.
Identity is what survives the consequence.
How should we think about AI ethically if consciousness remains uniquely human?
We need to think about AI ethically — but also honestly.
We are building systems of extraordinary capability without any interior life to anchor their judgment. No stake in outcomes, no experience of harm, and no memory of consequence. And yet we’re asking them to make decisions that affect human lives.
That’s the tension.
It’s what led me to my next book, Amoral Code. The argument is simple: we are increasingly delegating ethical judgment to systems that are, by definition, amoral — not immoral, but amoral.
There’s a difference between choosing harm and having no framework to understand harm at all.
We’ve spent years asking whether AI will become evil. We haven’t spent nearly enough time asking whether it can even understand what evil means.
That’s the conversation we need to be having.
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And what if we’ve misunderstood what it means to be human all along?
As artificial intelligence advances, this question is no longer theoretical—it’s defining our future.
This isn’t a book about artificial intelligence.
It’s about the one thing machines may never have—
experience.
We’ve spent decades measuring intelligence—processing power, learning speed, problem-solving.
But consciousness is something else entirely.
It is not just thinking.
It is experience.
In I Am; Therefore, I Think, JP Pulcini explores the line between:
Intelligence and awareness
Computation and experience
Simulation and reality
Blending philosophy, neuroscience, and modern AI, this book challenges a critical assumption:
If a machine can think… does that mean it is conscious?
The answer may redefine how we understand:
The human mind
Artificial intelligence
And the future relationship between the two
This book is for you if you’ve ever wondered:
What consciousness really is
Whether AI could ever truly be “aware”
What separates human experience from machine intelligence
This is not a technical book about AI.
It is a philosophical exploration of identity, awareness, and existence in the age of intelligent machines.
As AI becomes more powerful, the real question isn’t whether machines can think.
It’s whether thinking alone is enough.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: ai, artificial intelligence, Artificial Intelligence & Semantics, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, book trailer, bookblogger, books, books to read, booktube, booktuber, Consciousness & Thought Philosophy, ebook, goodreads, I Am Therefore I Think, I Am Therefore I Think: Consciousness and Humanity in the Age of AI, indie author, JP Pulcini, kindle, kobo, literature, nonfiction, nook, novel, Philosophy Metaphysics, read, reader, reading, story, trailer, writer, writing
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
IMPACT: Your Ultimate Playbook for Life
Posted by Literary Titan

IMPACT: Your Ultimate Playbook for Life led by Shar Moore feels like a glossy, curated “playbook for life” that you can dip into at random and still get something out of it. It is built like a coffee table collection, with short pieces from a wide mix of contributors. The chapters rotate through big themes like mastery, achievement, perseverance, inspiration, transformation, and creation, so the book reads more like a series of sharp snapshots than one long story. Along the way, it also pauses for a dedicated special feature on Destiny Rescue and the fight against child exploitation, which shifts the mood in a serious, gut-level way.
On the writing side, I liked the variety. It kept me awake. It kept me turning pages. Some entries are warm and chatty, like a friend telling you what they learned the hard way. The money piece from Rae Brent is a good example. It is plainspoken and kind of blunt, in a good way. It says the “boring” habits matter, and it does not pretend discipline is glamorous. I also appreciated the book’s confidence in its own vibe. The “golden thread” idea sets a hopeful tone, and the whole thing is clearly designed to be picked up, put down, and picked up again. The mix of voices gives the book real texture. Some pages were emotional while others act like a gentle boost, the kind of uplifting wallpaper you do not overthink but still enjoy. It keeps the tone fresh, and it lets different ideas land in different ways.
The ideas land best when they get specific. I felt that in the pieces about being a “safe space” for people, and choosing your impact with intention. And then the Destiny Rescue section comes in and, honestly, it jolts you. The story of the girl known as “Number 231” is haunting, and it makes the word impact stop being a slogan. The stats are emotionally stirring, too. Millions exploited, huge money involved, and children stuck inside those numbers. I also respected that the book shares practical details about how rescues happen, not just feel-good lines. Raids, covert work, border monitoring, plus real outcomes reported for 2023. It left me sad, then angry, then hopeful.
I see IMPACT as a high-energy sampler platter. It is best for readers who like quick hits of perspective, personal stories, and mindset nudges, plus a few moments that get genuinely real. I would recommend it to entrepreneurs, leaders, coaches, and anyone who enjoys reflective reading in small bites. It also works great as a gift book. The design-forward format helps. Last but certainly not least, the book’s design and layout are beautiful, exactly what you want from a coffee table book that’s going to catch someone’s eye. If you want a book that you can open anywhere and still find a spark, this one delivers.
Pages: 256 | ISBN : 978-1764037471
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, biographies, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, goodreads, IMPACT: Your Ultimate Playbook for Life, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, motivational, Motivational Self-Help, nonfiction, nook, novel, Philosophy Metaphysics, read, reader, reading, self help, Shar Moore, story, writer, writing






