What a 3,000-year-old cosmological tradition has to say about autonomous systems, intent preservation, and the ethics of delegation.
Infinite intent must contract to make space for finite action. The first cosmological move is also the first alignment problem — and the question of what survives the contraction is the question Reshimu was built to answer.
צִמְצוּם"The end is embedded in the beginning." On why the original intent must be carried, structurally, by every downstream agent — and what happens when it isn't.
נָעוּץA dwelling in the lower worlds. On why governance has to live at the level of the actual call — not at the level of the prompt or the policy document.
דִּירָהLion, ox, eagle, human. Four faces of the chariot in Ezekiel's vision — and the four runtime classifiers that mirror their function. How a cosmological figure became a system diagram.
חַיּוֹתThe impression that remains. What it means for an audit trail to be more than a log — and why the trace is the only thing that keeps a delegated system honest.
רְשִׁימוּWhy every serious AI ethics question is structurally a theological one. And why pretending otherwise has cost the field a decade of clear thinking.
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