In a world flooded with information, The System That Learned to Feel Nothing dissects the machinery of modern emotion. Eighty-four poems built from real headlines trace the evolution of a system that processes, fractures, and finally falls silent. Each section - INPUT, PROCESS, FAILURE, OUTPUT - mirrors the logic of an algorithm learning to imitate humanity, then abandoning it. The result is a cold, precise, and strangely beautiful document of our age: where data replaces empathy, and silence becomes the only language left.
Minimalist, brutalist, and hauntingly relevant, this book reads like a black box recording of the twenty-first century - a record of what happens when the world stops feeling. Perfect for readers of conceptual poetry, digital art, and anyone who senses the hum beneath the surface.
In a world flooded with information, The System That Learned to Feel Nothing dissects the machinery of modern emotion. Eighty-four poems built from real headlines trace the evolution of a system that processes, fractures, and finally falls silent. Each section - INPUT, PROCESS, FAILURE, OUTPUT - mirrors the logic of an algorithm learning to imitate humanity, then abandoning it. The result is a cold, precise, and strangely beautiful document of our age: where data replaces empathy, and silence becomes the only language left.
Minimalist, brutalist, and hauntingly relevant, this book reads like a black box recording of the twenty-first century - a record of what happens when the world stops feeling. Perfect for readers of conceptual poetry, digital art, and anyone who senses the hum beneath the surface.