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Where to Begin

This site holds over a hundred articles, written since 2016. You don't need to read them all.

My starting point isn't technology; it's order. Fifteen years of theological training taught me to keep asking: amid chaos and acceleration, what kind of structure can actually carry meaning? That question took me out of seminary and into entrepreneurship: food-and-agriculture supply chains, sustainable construction, and now AI strategy, circular-economy data infrastructure, and Taiwan-Japan industrial collaboration.

So the writing here often sits across fields that rarely meet: AI and judgment, faith and technology, Taiwan's ground reality and the world's larger questions. They share one measure: tools can move fast, but judgment, pace, and responsibility have to stay with people.

Below are three paths. Pick the one that speaks to you.

Path One

How to Keep Human Judgment in the Age of AI

The stronger the tools get, the more valuable it becomes to ask who has the final say. This path is about keeping that judgment in your own hands.

  1. I Had Codex Catch Claude's Mistakes — But I Don't Just Take Its Word for It Starting from one real workflow
  2. Thinking in the Post-Code Era: When Taste Becomes Humanity's Key Competitive Edge
  3. The Death of Man-Days: We Need New Productivity Metrics for the AI Collaboration Era
  4. What Is Neuralese? When AI Thinks Through Non-Linguistic Reasoning, Human Linguistic Sovereignty Ends
Path Two

Faith, Technology, and Where Humans Stand

Someone who believes and uses AI every day, thinking things through from a position that belongs fully to neither camp.

  1. AI Cannot Replace Faith: A Lesson from the Pope for the 'Efficiency-First' Generation The easiest place to start
  2. "Technology Is Never Neutral": The Pope's AI Encyclical
  3. The Necessity of Incarnation: A Philosophical Argument for the Embodied Development of Artificial Intelligence The deepest one; save it for last
Path Three

Taiwan on the Ground, Organizational Change, and Real Practice

No trend commentary, only what has actually been done. Every piece here has a clock and a ledger behind it.

  1. After Evaluating Transync AI's Pricing, I Built My Own Real-Time Meeting Translation for $0 (NT$16 Per Session) NT$16 per meeting
  2. A Non-Programmer Wrote 23,000 Lines of Code in 12 Days
  3. How Many Carbon Credits Do Four Hundred Thousand Footsteps Correspond To? Mazu pilgrimage × GPS carbon tracking
Curious about the person behind these essays? About →
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