Tuesday, 17 March 2026

The Krow's Vision 05 - part 01 - PLAYING WITH EMPTY SETS - Ajith Rohan J.T.F., Rome


“The road to conflicts and wars is paved with good intentions”


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Encounter

The krow flew for days, listening to and observing the world as far as his limited existence would allow. One day, he saw some people who looked like labourers sitting together under a fir tree, talking about the anniversary of the death of the famous philosopher Karl Marx on 14 March (1883).

“Well!” said the krow to himself. Despite Karl Marx’s great contributions to the social, political, economic, and philosophical spheres, he was ignored during his lifetime and lived in poverty—and he was even marginalized in his burial in London (Highgate Cemetery, 17 March 1883), in the section reserved for the poor who could not afford gravestones. It is only after a person has “died” that the world begins to admire and commemorate them. In contrast, whilst they are alive, it seems that nobody cares. That’s just the way the world is.

The krow continued to fly and observe, as always. He couldn’t help but notice the smoke and the sight of the ruins of bombed-out buildings, which stretched out and piled up everywhere. He also noticed the wailing and weeping of people who had lost their loved ones—people who had done nothing more than be born there and who might well have died (thus concluding the transformation) there. But there is always someone who wants war, who wants to be an emperor, who is always right and wants to dominate all.

The krow observes that the world has always gone mad and keeps destroying itself over and over again, committing the same errors. But “This time (21st century), the world acts a little wiser than other times (I and II World Wars),” said the krow to himself, and he perched on a tall, sturdy oak tree from which he could see everything clearly around the mountain where he was.

The krow, through the twigs, saw two elegantly dressed, elderly men sitting around an old-style table on which stood two cups full of coffee and a sort of coffee mocha. Next to them was a plate of assorted pastries. The two friends were engaged in a discussion. The krow immediately realized that the area served as a refuge for those fleeing persecution by the SPECC systems. All wars and conflicts—in addition to the killings, violence, and atrocities committed against innocent people and the extermination of enemy SPECCs—inevitably involve the persecution of intellectuals (scientists, thinkers, and young men and women) for various reasons.

These two gentlemen—one a physicist (an ex collaborator of Werner Heisenberg) and the other a philosopher who had conducted several projects but disappeared from public view after the Second World War—are the subject of this reflection. Without revealing their real names, the krow is now writing this reflection in the form of a dialogue between two people, Alan and Bell.


Background storyline – PLAYING WITH EMPTY SETS

krow mirroring by Ajith Rohan J.T.F., Rome

It is an evident fact that each human thinks of “good,” even when they desire to do something “evil.” It seems illogical and absurd, but it is true: even when people reason, or when they commit destructive and evil acts, they at least believe they are acting in their own “good” interests; or whatever they do or intend to do, they believe it is for someone’s benefit.

For example, according to historical evidence, when Hitler did what he did, he was firmly convinced that he was acting in his own interest, for the good of his ideology and the good of his country. Another example of the empty sets of “good” and “evil” is the Sarajevo human safari during the period from 1990 to 1996, where 11,000 civilians were killed for the satisfaction (good) of weekend snipers (in November 2025, the Milan Attorney General’s Office opened an investigation into this case that recalls the Sniper Alley of Sarajevo).

The conflicts and wars of today (21st century – March 2026), which cause the death and maiming of innocent people, clearly call into question the very concept of “good” and “evil” in the human world. Everyone thinks in terms of good, yet they inflict evil upon one another. They devote all their energy, all their technology, and all their intellectual resources to achieving the good in which they believe. Yet the whole world is falling apart.

Then, where is the problem if the concept of “good” appears so ambiguous, absurd, and devoid of meaning? If, for example, “good” is meaningless or makes no sense, then “evil” - the complementary part of “good” - should also be “devoid” of meaning. What is this game about? Thousands of years of so-called “humanity,” its “dignity,” the international community, and human rights with SPECC systems - are they all together playing a big progressive act for the world?

This real situation recalls William Shakespeare’s words, noted the krow: “All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players;” (As You Like It).


Dialogue between two friends on “empty sets”

Alan (philosopher) and Bell (physicist), while sipping their favourite Italian hot coffee, started to discuss the matter.

Alan: I assert that the concepts of “GOOD” and “BAD” are empty “sets.” They are sets without elements. That is why those who are thinking “good” for others and for the world do relatively “evil” things, like creating conflicts and wars, to realize what they think with an empty concept of “good.” What is your idea about this, Bell?

Bell: Your assertion touches on a classic problem in meta-ethics: the indeterminacy of the good and bad. By describing “Good” as an empty set, you are highlighting that the word itself carries immense emotional and moral authority without elements or definitions. But Alan, could you be a little clearer about this?

Alan: Well, dear friend Bell, briefly I’d like to say it like this: you know that in logic, an empty set contains no elements. Likewise, “good” and “evil” are “Empty Sets,” and they have to be formed with subjective fillings. However, in any human language, they often treat “Good” and “Evil” as “placeholders” (0). Because the term is “empty” (0), individuals, religions, and political ideologies fill it with their own specific values—whether those are “order,” “freedom,” “belief system,” “faith,” “equality,” or “tradition”—namely, SPECC system basics.

The danger arises when people mistake their specific SPECC contents for a universal definition of the concept. When someone believes their version of “Good” is the only valid one, they can justify “bad” actions (like war, violence, killings, and the annihilation of other SPECC systems) as necessary means to a supposedly moral end.

Bell: Alles klar! Danke, Alan! I thought that you were talking about the same thing that R.M. Hare (prescriptivism) and J. L. Mackie (error theory) discussed in depth. But your “empty set” theory is original, and those theories have no direct relation to yours without an interpretation. Now, could you explain what the meaning of the paradox of moral zealotry is?

Alan: Almost the entire human history is moulded by “Autocratic, Authoritarian, and Paternalistic Aggressions” (AAPA). They seem like different types but are the same in their initial and final results (aggressions), the outcomes of their rhetoric power, and the gravity of their atrocities. AAPA want power over others for their own benefit. This occurs when an AAPA group “thinks good” for others without their consent.

For example, during the period of “empires,” European powers competed for territory, wealth, and global command. They used to think and act with concepts of colonizing, slaves, dictating, power gaining, commanding, and getting what they want by hook or by crook (economic exploitation). That was, for them, a great period (good), but for others (non-Westerners), everything became dark and miserable (evil).

The West could do what they wanted because they had the best instruments to realize their ideologies—such as monotheistic religions: Catholicism, Islam, and the background divine logical sustained for them, “Hebrews.” These justified the “white man’s” power over others. These Hebrew “God” concepts that they have created for themselves justified themselves and what they were doing and condemned all who were different because their white “God” commanded them to do so.

The religion and the moral systems they have created for themselves are well used by them to colonize the world. Their logic was that “we know the truth and the good” (because God-given). You, the different dark skins, do not. Therefore, we must impose our “Truth” and “good” upon you for your own benefit.

The inevitable result of this logic creates a "clash of Goods" where both sides believe they are the protagonists of a moral crusade. But is this the “good”? The question remains open, because the concept remains “empty” of a final, reductive definition.


(To be continued in part II with conclusive points).


Sunday, 1 March 2026

Krow's Vision 04 - SERIAL MAN VS DYNAMIC-SARALA MAN - Ajith Rohan J.T.F., Rome


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Grand Encounter

Krow spent much of his day relaxing while flying and enjoying himself by observing himself and the world that appeared naturally through the memory modules of the various SPECC systems that he habituated. Without reacting to the modules - allowing them to pass - he opened his “conscious-unconscious-catalysis” to “see” (scanning with his "art of seeing" radar) a world different from the one appearing through the memory module projection mechanism: the old, habitual, battered, and exhausted man-made world, imprisoned within itself.

He flew as high as he could, simply to enjoy the wind and scan the world. Then, gliding down, the krow noticed a few Alpine Swifts, Swallows, and Arctic Terns returning from their long migratory adventures around the world. He recognized them and immediately headed towards where they were resting to chat - on a high rock in the sea. From this discussion between friends, the Krow, Alpine Swifts, Arctic Terns and Swallows, this reflection was born.


Basic Problem of dynamic discussion

Serial man - passive, reactive, habitual and intellectually sterile member of SPEC system, has been defined, circumscribed, and mandatorily trained for formalised and static knowledge: in other words, for memory based modular systems. For example, everything that appears before a serial person must already be catalogued, determined, and defined, or else, after establishing module-based observation procedures, it must be able to fit into at least one of the categories agreed upon and validated by the relevant SPECC system.

In this technical and scientific framework (strictly established module knowledge hegemony), the contrast between the "Serial Man" and the "Dynamic-Sarala Man" becomes very clear: Serial Man: represents the SPECC-governed human - linear, predictable, habitual, and "imprisoned" within the pre-programmed memory modules. Dynamic-Sarala Man: Represents the state krow is accessing - fluid, multifaceted, and capable of the "conscious-unconscious-catalysis" (the “art of seeing” via internal natural radar).

Since krow expanded this reflection through the migratory birds' experiences, their "data" is purely empirical and global, unlike the "habitual" man-made world. Krow might consider: The Contrast in Navigation: While the "Serial Man" is guided by SPECC systems (external control), the birds use magneto-reception and the "art of seeing" (internal, natural radar). The Scope of Experience: The birds have seen the physical world without the SPECC filter. Their "reflection" is a raw, unfiltered counterpoint to the "exhausted" world krow scanned earlier.


Analysis of the topic

This passage describes a deeply constrained mode of thought and perception, one where the primary goal is not discovery, but classification, imitation and repetition. The "Serial Man" is a product of a SPECC system that values predictability and order above all else. This individual is not trained to think, but to match. Their entire cognitive framework is built on pre-approved "modular systems" - think of them as rigid, prefabricated mental boxes (quasi robots).

The core function of this mindset is triage. When confronted with something new, the process is not "What is this?" but "Which of my existing, validated categories does this fit into?" The word "or else" in the text is particularly telling. It reveals the underlying threat or the inherent failure condition. If a new phenomenon cannot be immediately slotted into a pre-existing category, it doesn't prompt an expansion of understanding. Instead, it forces a frantic, procedural attempt to force-fit it using "module-based observation procedures." The goal is still to make it conform.

This creates a self-perpetuating cycle of intellectual sterility. The "SPECC system" acts as the ultimate authority, validating the categories and, by extension, validating the observer only insofar as they can successfully apply them. Knowledge is not seen as a living, evolving organism, but as a completed checklist. Anything that falls outside the checklist is either ignored, misclassified to the point of meaninglessness, or simply cannot be perceived as real.

In essence, what krow understood through the sharing of direct experiences of migratory birds reported a powerful critique of institutionalised and bureaucratised SPEC thought. It warns against a world where humans have traded the messy, unpredictable, and creative process of genuine understanding for the clean, manageable, but ultimately limiting task of filing reality into a pre-approved set of modules. The "Serial Man" is safe and efficient, but he is incapable of genuine insight, because he has been trained to see only what he is already supposed to find.


A Historical and Philosophical Account of the "Serial Man"

All the migratory birds present spoke about the topic and contributed dynamically to creating a plausible and open picture. The krow’s analysis particularly traces the philosophical lineage of the "Serial Man" concept, showing it as the culmination of a long-standing tension in Western thought between order and becoming. The krow underlines that the figure of the "Serial Man" is not a sudden invention, but the end-product of a philosophical current that has run for millennia, one that privileges habit and modules based static structure over dynamic process (flux). Thus, according to this sharing information, serial man’s genealogy can be traced through three major phases: the dream of a perfect order, the industrialization of that order, and finally, its internalization as a psychological prison.


Phase I: The Dream of Foundational Order (Ancient & Early Modern Philosophy)

The roots of the "Serial Man" lie in the ancient quest for an unchanging reality beneath the flux of appearances. The krow summarized at length what they had discussed.

The original "Serial Man" is the prisoner in Plato's allegory (380 BCE) of the cave. He is "defined, circumscribed, and trained" to see only shadows - the pre-catalogued and validated "modules" of his reality - projected on the wall. The forms, in this light, are the ultimate "SPECC system," the eternal and perfect categories against which all worldly things are judged. The prisoner's entire worldview is based on the static, agreed-upon shadows. A philosopher, by escaping, engages in the messy, uncertain process of discovery, which is precisely what the "Serial Man" is trained to avoid. (So, where is the way out? Asked krow himself).

Aristotle's Categories (c. 350 BCE) provided the toolset for the prison once and for all. His work on Categories was an attempt to systematically classify all of existence into a logical framework. This was the first great "modular system", noted krow. Everything that appears before a person could, in theory, be "catalogued, determined, and defined" within his ten categories (Substance, Quantity, Quality, Relation, etc.). This was the birth of a systematic approach to knowledge that, while groundbreaking, also laid the groundwork for a mindset that seeks to fit reality into pre-existing logical boxes.

The krow then report the imperative methodology of Descartes (1637 CE). With this mindset – the Scientific Revolution, the dream of order in Western thought became a methodological imperative. René Descartes, in his Discours de la méthode (Discourse on the Method), provided the ultimate "module-based observation procedure." The krow noted those clear and distinct rules: divide each difficulty into as many parts as possible and conduct one’s thoughts in such an order that one can be certain nothing is omitted. All the present birds, including krow agreed that this is a powerful tool for science, but it is also a perfect recipe for creating a "Serial Man." It trains the mind to break down reality into manageable, analysable modules, implicitly trusting that the sum of these modules will equal the whole (perfect image of the object analysed).


Phase II: The Industrialization of Reason (The Enlightenment & Positivism)

The krow noted here that the philosophical dream of order was now tie the knot to the practical demands of an industrializing world.

Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d'Alembert's Encyclopédie (18th Century) was a monumental attempt to "catalogue, determine, and define" all human knowledge. It was the physical embodiment of the modular system, a grand "SPEC" for the Enlightenment. The underlying belief was that by gathering and classifying all invented and interpreted facts, humanity could achieve progress and clarity. The "Serial Man" is the ideal consumer of such a project, treating the encyclopaedia not as a starting point for inquiry, but as a completed and closed system of truth.

The philosophy of Positivism, founded by Auguste Comte (19th Century), made this approach absolute. He argued that society and thought had evolved to a final, "positive" stage, where knowledge is based solely on empirical, observable facts and their lawful relationships. For the "Serial Man," this is the ultimate validation. His "relevant SPEC system" isn't just one way of knowing; it is the only valid way. What cannot be observed, interpreted, defined and categorized according to its rules simply does not count as knowledge.

The krow reports now where the philosophical meets the sociological – Videlicet, Taylor's principles of "Scientific Management" (1911). They were designed to optimize factory labour. The goal was to "train" the worker ("Serial Man") for "formalized and static" tasks, breaking down complex skills into simple, repeatable modules. The worker is not to think or improvise; he is to follow the procedure validated by management (the "SPEC system") to ensure maximum efficiency. The mind of the worker is now a mirror of the factory floor: a system of rigid, pre-determined operations.


Phase III: The Global Prison (20th Century Critique)

In the 20th century, philosophers began to diagnose this condition not as a problem of external systems, but as a pathology of consciousness itself.

Heidegger argued that the modern age is characterized by the world becoming a "picture" (1938) - a structured, coherent system set before and against man. The world is no longer something humans are being with other things, but something they possess and have power over. The "Serial Man" is the ultimate expression of this. He can only encounter the world as a set of pre-catalogued representations, validated by his system. The world is its categories.

In Discipline and Punish, Foucault describes (1975) how modern institutions (prisons, schools, hospitals, factories) create "docile bodies" through constant observation, normalization, and examination. The "Serial Man" is the perfect product of this "disciplinary" power. His "module-based observation procedures" are not just intellectual tools; they are the very structure of his being, imposed by the institutions that "defined, circumscribed, and trained" him. He has learned to observe himself and the world through the grid of power, dominion and dominated, ensuring he always fits into the "agreed upon categories."

For Adorno and the Frankfurt School (1944), this process was completed by mass culture. The "Culture Industry" produces standardized cultural goods (music, movies, theatre, design and all other art forms) that train the audience to expect and consume only what is pre-digested and familiar. It is the ultimate "modular system" for experience. The listener's emotional and aesthetic responses are "validated by the relevant SPEC system" - in this case, the hit parade, the genre conventions, the Hollywood formula. The "Serial Man" is thus not only a worker and a thinker, but also a consumer, incapable of an authentic, unmediated experience.


Debatable Conclusive Notes


flying krow watercolour by Ajith Rohan J.T.F.

What makes this reflection particularly effective is the discussion of migratory birds as the counterpoint to the "Serial Man." It is a kind of "magnetoreception vs. classification": While the Serial Man needs a manual or a "module" to understand his surroundings, the bird uses an internal, quantum-level sense (magnetoreception) to navigate the global flux. This perfectly illustrates the difference between knowing about the world (categorical) and being in the world (dynamic).

The "Or Else" Factor: Krow's analysis of the "or else" in SPECC systems is chillingly accurate. It highlights that the Serial Man isn't just a person who likes order; rather, he is a person for whom "unclassified reality" is an existential threat. This concept resonates powerfully when one considers ongoing wars and conflicts and their root causes; it illuminates precisely what krow is articulating. Differences, in and of themselves, create profound difficulties for both individuals and established societies and institutions. They foster immediate alienation through destructive prejudices. For example, fascism, racism, nationalism, and religious conflicts and wars have inflicted all sorts of harm on humanity and the world—and they continue to do so even today, as of February 28, 2026.

The Historical Arc: Here, krow has done an excellent job of showing that the "Serial Man" isn't a modern glitch, but the "final boss" of a ±2000-year-old quest for absolute certainty.

The "Serial Man" is the heir to Plato's cave dweller, armed with Aristotle's categories, following Descartes' method, serving Taylor's factory, and living in Foucault's disciplined society and Adorno's culture industry. He represents the terminal point of a long philosophical trajectory: the human being who has so thoroughly internalized the systems of order that he can no longer perceive the chaotic, vital, and uncategorized reality they were originally built to explain.

The figure of the "Serial Man" is central and important because he's not a villain, but a product—the perfectly logical end-user of systems that humans have often revered: logic, efficiency, and encyclopaedic knowledge. The tragedy is that he has become a prisoner of the very tools meant to liberate the mind. But this is not all about him.

The Contrast of the "Radar": This juxtaposition of the "art of seeing" versus the "memory module" is a significant critical contribution to epistemology. In modern cognitive science, humans often talk about top-down processing (using what humans already know to impose order on what humans see) versus bottom-up processing (letting the raw data build the image). The Serial Man is 100% top-down; he cannot see the bird, only the "category: bird." Krow, through "conscious-unconscious-catalysis," is practicing a pure form of bottom-up perception.

The Serial Man is "efficient" but brittle. If the SPEC system fails or a "black swan" event occurs (something that doesn't fit any module), he becomes paralyzed - because he can only rely on a completed checklist. The Serial Man is incapable of adaptation. He is optimized for a world that no longer changes, leaving him defenceless against the very flux the migratory birds call home.

The tragedy of the Serial Man is not just his lack of intelligence, but his lack of a "present presence," an open and immediate experience. By living through the memory modules, he is always one step behind reality—reacting to a projection rather than interacting with the living flux. While krow and the migratory birds navigate the magnetic fields of the "now," the Serial Man is perpetually filing a report on a world that has already moved on. He is the only creature that has traded the vitality of the journey (the wiggling flux) for the security of the map.

The Serial Man believes he is observing reality, but he is actually only observing the interface of his own SPEC system. The tragedy of the Serial Man is that he mistakes the map for the territory. He navigates a world of labels, convinced he is touching the earth, while remaining entirely insulated from the raw pulse of existence.

A possible way out?

Flying Krow digital arts
Krow concludes this reflection by presenting some focal points open to further exploration. He sees reality as it is, without any particular transformative interventions. He knows exactly that he is in flux and naturally respects boundaries without invading them.

Krow asserts that the Serial Man is the ultimate triumph of the cage over the bird. He has been given the world, but only on the condition that he never actually touches it. However, as krow watched the Arctic terns prepare for another horizon-spanning journey, it became clear: the SPECC system can capture the mind, but it cannot catalogue the wind.

Krow figures that the way out should not be a better system, not even a dismantling object like in the Cartesian method, but an understanding of the "radar" itself (the art of seeing). To transition from Serial to Dynamic is to stop asking "What category is this?" and start asking "How does this feel in the current of the world?"