Consciousness, collapse and tokens

Consciousness cannot be an algorithm In 1989, Roger Penrose — British mathematical physicist, the one who proved black holes are inevitable in general relativity, Nobel Prize 2020 — publishes The Emperor’s New Mind1 and makes a claim that infuriates half the academic world: human consciousness is not computable. The reasoning goes like this. Gödel proved that for any sufficiently powerful formal system, there exist truths the system cannot prove. If the brain were a computer — a formal system executing algorithms — there would be things we couldn’t understand. But we do understand them (mathematical insight, for instance). Ergo: the brain is doing something no algorithm, given any amount of time and memory, can ever do. ...

June 7, 2026 · 12 min

Fabble, or: bedtime stories that won't bankrupt me

Preamble A couple of summers ago I had what felt like a small idea: ask an LLM to write bedtime stories for kids. Glue images and audio on top. Call it a day. The plan fit in a paragraph. The system as it stands today does not. The prototype was called Fable — a script with two HTTP calls and a folder of .txt files. The current incarnation is Fabble (fabble.me): a serverless app on AWS that generates stories, validates them, illustrates them, narrates them, broadcasts a fresh one every week, and handles payments. Occasionally it writes a story I’m proud to read aloud. ...

May 20, 2026 · 7 min