Fiction
Phase 1: The Ultimate Disconnection Protocol
The modern world is going through something that experts can't quite explain. What they call a "mental health crisis" or "failing to fit into society" is actually the spark of something much deeper. It is the exact moment when you begin to see the cracks in the sky of this cardboard reality.
By Lorena Alonsoabout 23 hours ago in Critique
Mapping vs Listing
Much of what gets labeled as rambling is actually a mismatch between how ideas are structured internally and how they are expected to be presented externally. Many environments reward listing, where ideas are arranged in clean sequences, bullet points, or linear arguments that move from premise to conclusion in a predictable order. This structure works well for certain kinds of reasoning, particularly when problems are discrete and conclusions are already known. It does not work as well for reasoning that depends on relationships, causality, or pattern recognition across multiple domains. When relational thinkers speak, they are often navigating a different internal structure altogether, and that difference is frequently misunderstood.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 days ago in Critique
VEDAS, UPANISHADS AND WESTERN PHILOSOPHY - ALEXIS KARPOUZOS
The Encounter of East and West as a Philosophical Problem The encounter between Indian and Western philosophy is one of the most fascinating yet most perilous undertakings in the history of philosophy. Fascinating because the two traditions — independently developed in different historical and cultural contexts — display surprising convergences that cannot be interpreted as accidental: they seem to touch something common in the deeper structure of human thought and experience. Perilous because superficial similarity can mislead: different concepts bearing similar names, different practices aimed at analogous ends, different world-views articulated through comparable conceptual schemas. Alexis Karpouzos stands in this encounter in a particular way: he neither seeks synthesis nor establishes opposition — he moves diagonally, drawing from both traditions without belonging exclusively to either, recognising in each a fragmentary wholeness of the Wandering Truth. The analysis that follows is not a historical-philosophical survey — it is an analysis in tension: each tradition is placed in full dialogue with the other two, and the convergences and divergences reveal different aspects of the same foundational philosophical question.
By alexis karpouzos2 days ago in Critique
Falling Between Every System
Modern social systems are often described as safety nets. Employment law protects workers. Healthcare programs provide treatment. Disability benefits replace lost income. Unemployment insurance bridges job loss. Each system is presented as a safeguard designed to catch people when life disrupts their ability to function normally. Yet for many people living with disability, chronic illness, or injury, the lived experience is the opposite. Rather than forming a net, these systems stack vertically, each with its own eligibility rules, thresholds, and assumptions. Instead of catching the fall, they create gaps. People do not slip through because they failed to try. They fall because the systems were never designed to align.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast7 days ago in Critique
Output vs Oversaturation
The modern anxiety around oversaturation is not unfounded. People are surrounded by more words, videos, opinions, and explanations than they can meaningfully absorb. In that environment, producing more content can feel irresponsible or self-defeating, as though adding anything further only contributes to noise. This concern often leads thoughtful people to hesitate, holding back ideas out of fear that volume itself will devalue what they have to say. The assumption is that meaning is diluted by abundance, and that restraint is the only way to preserve significance.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast10 days ago in Critique
Review: Brighton Part Two – Emotional Highs, Historical Lows, and Character Depth in Regency Drama
After the release of part two for Brighton, I found myself in a strange limbo, waiting a few days before I could finally watch it since my mum was still away on holiday. That anticipation was a genuine test of patience and set the tone for my viewing experience. During this time, the ongoing high tea scenes became increasingly irritating—they felt like they dragged on forever, with little movement in the plot. For instance, the repetitive pouring of tea and polite small talk seemed to stall the storyline, making it hard to stay engaged. However, the cheese tastings among the gentlemen offered a refreshing contrast. Watching these moments unfold felt authentic; it was fascinating to see a tradition that was commonplace in the Regency era depicted faithfully on screen. This attention to period detail helped ground the show and made the setting feel more immersive, reminding me why I enjoy period dramas in the first place.
By Sarah Xenos16 days ago in Critique
Initiation. Content Warning.
*note: This is an unfinished draft of a story I’m working on for The Rule Everyone Knows. Just doing a temperature check for characterization. I’m going to keep it here until I complete the draft and finish editing it. Do not be gentle if something isn’t working.
By Harper Lewis26 days ago in Critique
The reason Hulk refused to fight Thanos
The Real Reason Hulk Refused to Fight Thanos 🚨 Most people think that in Avengers: Infinity War, Hulk refused to fight Thanos because he was scared. After all, this was the first time anyone had seen the Green Goliath genuinely overwhelmed in hand-to-hand combat. But the truth might be much deeper than simple fear.
By Literary fusion26 days ago in Critique








