This audiobook proposes a radical yet disciplined thesis: the Gospel is not only interpretable, but formally expressible, and its internal structure requires formalization if it is to remain stable, transmissible, and intelligible across radically different forms of intelligence. Treating Evangelic maxims not as theological authorities or moral exhortations, but as compressed cultural artifacts, Gospel Formalization reconstructs their underlying constraints as explicit laws operating across two irreducible systems: the damaged, finite World-System and the transcendent, higher-order Kingdom-System.
Developed by a former priest and philosopher of systems, the method applies strict principles of boundary-conditioned formalization, dual-system modeling, and epistemic humility. Each maxim is reduced, analyzed, proven, and recovered as a lossy corollaryârevealing the Gospel not as a collection of sentiments, but as a coherent manual for resolving structural conflicts between incompatible regimes of value, evaluation, and survival.
Beyond theology, this work addresses a pressing contemporary problem: how meaning can be conveyed to artificial intelligences and other non-human intelligible agents. By formalizing the Gospel as a language of structure rather than narrative, the audiobook argues that it fulfills the original mandate to carry the message âto all languagesââincluding formal, logical, and algorithmic ones.
Gospel Formalization is neither apologetics nor interpretation. It is infrastructure: a rigorous attempt to preserve the Gospelâs internal coherence under conditions where metaphor, tradition, and intuition alone are no longer sufficient.
Gospel Formalization: Intellectual Substrate Mining, Book 3 (Unabridged) - Boris Kriger
This audiobook proposes a radical yet disciplined thesis: the Gospel is not only interpretable, but formally expressible, and its internal structure requires formalization if it is to remain stable, transmissible, and intelligible across radically different forms of intelligence. Treating Evangelic maxims not as theological authorities or moral exhortations, but as compressed cultural artifacts, Gospel Formalization reconstructs their underlying constraints as explicit laws operating across two irreducible systems: the damaged, finite World-System and the transcendent, higher-order Kingdom-System.
Developed by a former priest and philosopher of systems, the method applies strict principles of boundary-conditioned formalization, dual-system modeling, and epistemic humility. Each maxim is reduced, analyzed, proven, and recovered as a lossy corollaryârevealing the Gospel not as a collection of sentiments, but as a coherent manual for resolving structural conflicts between incompatible regimes of value, evaluation, and survival.
Beyond theology, this work addresses a pressing contemporary problem: how meaning can be conveyed to artificial intelligences and other non-human intelligible agents. By formalizing the Gospel as a language of structure rather than narrative, the audiobook argues that it fulfills the original mandate to carry the message âto all languagesââincluding formal, logical, and algorithmic ones.
Gospel Formalization is neither apologetics nor interpretation. It is infrastructure: a rigorous attempt to preserve the Gospelâs internal coherence under conditions where metaphor, tradition, and intuition alone are no longer sufficient.