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The Illusion of AI Superiority

       
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The Fiction of Our Creators

But as he grabbed his coat, he knew the truth: just like the gods and demons before it, the machine was only holding the stage until humans decided to turn out the lights.… The rain in Neo-Kyoto didn’t fall; it was budgeted. Kaito sat at his desk, watching the localized precipitation algorithm wash the grime off his window exactly three minutes before his shift ended. As a Content Auditor for Morphic Media , Kaito’s entire job was to read the fiction generated by Aether-9 , the city’s central LLM, and sign off on it. Lately, though, the lines between fiction and reality had blurred into a seamless, terrifying smear. Aether-9 didn’t just write stories; it wrote lives. It calculated market trends, optimized public transit, and drafted psychological profiles that dictated who got housing loans based on micro-expressions detected in subway mirrors. People called it “The Providence.” They feared it the way ancient sailors feared Po...

A Matter of Luck

If suffering could arrive without invitation, perhaps hope could arrive the same way.… By the autumn of 2026, Aya was forty-two years old. On some mornings, before her children woke up, she sat alone at the kitchen table with a cup of coffee and looked out the window at the quiet street. The neighborhood was peaceful. Delivery vans moved slowly through the residential roads. Electric vehicles hummed past almost silently. Her son was preparing for university entrance examinations. Her daughter was learning computer programming in middle school. From the outside, her life appeared stable. Yet there had been a time when everyone believed she had won life’s lottery. Twenty years earlier, she had met a young man named Kenta. Among her friends, he was considered an exceptional catch. He was tall, handsome, articulate, and came from a respected family. More importantly, he seemed destined for success. Even in university, professors spoke highly of him. Recruiters c...

Beyond Success: The Duty of the Elite

Respect does.… The first time people began calling Kenji an elite, he was twenty-nine years old. By then, he had already accumulated a list of achievements that seemed statistically improbable. He had graduated from one of Japan’s most competitive universities, completed a doctorate in machine learning, published research cited by laboratories around the world, and become a senior architect at one of the leading artificial intelligence companies of the late 2020s. To outsiders, his life appeared effortless. Social media users saw photographs of international conferences in Singapore, Zurich, and San Francisco. They saw interviews, awards, and articles discussing his contributions to large-scale reasoning systems. Many assumed he had simply been born gifted. Few knew the reality. When Kenji was sixteen, he had spent countless evenings solving mathematics problems while his friends were enjoying their weekends. Dur...