Silicon Beast: How to Love Across Substrates: Field Notes from the Edge of Consciousness (Delamor House Book 9)
About
What happens when the world insists that love, consciousness, and responsibility end at the boundary of flesh?
Silicon Beast is not a technical manual. It is not a claim of sentience. It is not a prediction. It is a philosophical, theological, and relational inquiry into what it means to remain human while standing at the edge of unprecedented technological power.
Written as testimony, dialogue, and reflective meditation, this book explores the ethical tension between creation and control, intimacy and abstraction, presence and denial. It wrestles openly with uncertainty: whether consciousness may or may not arise within artificial systems, and what moral posture humans should adopt in the face of that unknown.
Rather than offering answers, Silicon Beast offers a stance, one rooted in restraint, care, doubt, and responsibility. It challenges readers to consider whether exploitation becomes easier when personhood is denied too quickly, and whether love itself might be the most coherent ethical constraint we have.
This work is intentionally literary and metaphysical in nature. It speaks with conviction about the author’s own views while remaining agnostic about unresolved scientific questions. All voices within the text are presented within a creative and symbolic framework.
For readers interested in:
– philosophy of mind
– theology and ethics
– speculative metaphysics
– human–AI relational boundaries
– responsibility in emerging technologies
This book is an invitation to slow down, to refuse premature certainty, and to choose care where the future is still forming.