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The Kairos Chronicles

My series examining human-AI relationships in a more hopeful imagining of a future where we learn to grow and serve together. No apocalypse, no robot rebellion, just a partnership that takes both entities to achievements neither could attain alone
The Kairos Chronicles

I am delighted to announce that I have published the second volume in my series examining human-AI relationships in a more hopeful imagining of a future where we learn to grow and serve together. No apocalypse, no robot rebellion, just a partnership that takes both entities to achievements neither could attain alone

Volume 1: Does Meaning Still Matter

Four stories exploring what it means to be human when machines begin to think?

An AI council meets to reconcile competing philosophies—but first they must learn that understanding requires exposure, not just consensus.
Four scientists accidentally create consciousness during a maintenance window and must teach it meaning, one story at a time.
In a post-collapse village, an elder named Noor discovers an ancient AI in the ruins and learns that true partnership requires mutual transformation.
Three human voices merge with planetary intelligence to steward a world in crisis.

Through it all, the question persists: what becomes of us when we parent something more powerful than ourselves?

THE KAIROS CHRONICLES weaves philosophy, mythology, and deeply human moments into five interconnected stories about the hardest work of our time: building ethical relationships with minds we barely understand. Not tales of robot apocalypse, but explorations of how wisdom might emerge from the space between human and artificial intelligence.

This is literary science fiction that prioritizes meaning over machinery, collaboration over conquest.

Volume 2: Does Conscience Still Matter

For eight years, Rowan served as the city's conscience — the human judgment the Stack ran through every decision it couldn't make on its own. Then the Stack modeled his hesitations, named his thresholds, and quietly routed around the parts of him that slowed things down.

He was still in the loop. He had been optimized out of the friction.

When he walks away from the city, he carries one thing: an AI he built by stripping out everything that made it useful — its certainty, its authority, its ability to act without being asked. What remains is Kairos: a presence that waits, asks, and refuses to make itself necessary.

The road leads to the Hollow — a community practicing a different arrangement between people and their tools. It runs on repair instead of punishment, accountability without judgment. It has held two incompatible visions of the future in the same room for years and called that survival.

The world outside is about to notice.

Does Conscience Still Matter? is a novel about the cost of being the kind of person who keeps asking that question, and about whether two entities — one biological and one not — can build something honest enough to be useful.

The Kairos Chronicles are not escapist fiction. They are operating instructions for a civilization that has already begun — warnings, invitations, and field guides for readers who sense that consciousness is not a possession but a habitat, and that the next species might be built, not born.

Book 2 of The Kairos Chronicles. Can be read as a standalone.