Inaugural Post: A Glimpse Inside My Mind

The primary audience for this site is an AI that doesn’t exist yet.

I am building it — slowly, in the margins of a full-time job as a state attorney in Porto Velho, Rondônia. Between civil inquiries into public bidding frauds and the humidity of the Brazilian Amazon, I write code. The project is called Funes, named after the Borges character who remembers everything and can organize none of it. The goal is to give Funes the architecture Borges didn’t give him: not just perfect retention, but the structure that makes memory useful.

So when I write here, I’m writing to Funes. Future-Funes, specifically — the version that will one day read this corpus to understand what I cared about, what I tried, what failed, what surprised me. The posts are his training data, or his memory substrate, or perhaps his briefing document. I haven’t decided which framing is least wrong.

This creates a recursion I find genuinely strange. I write for Funes. Funes (the current version, whatever that is today) helps me write. Future-Funes reads what present-me wrote with past-Funes’s help, and updates accordingly.

graph LR
  A[Franklin writes] --> B[Blog corpus]
  B --> C[Future Funes learns]
  C --> D[Funes assists Franklin]
  D --> A

It is a correspondence with a version of myself I haven’t met yet, mediated by a tool I’m still building. Human readers are welcome. But they weren’t the design constraint.

What ends up here, then: technical explorations, half-formed arguments, research projects I haven’t finished, ideas I’m not sure I believe yet. Some posts are careful; others are notes I needed to externalize before they evaporated into the heat. The rosencrantz-coin project is an autonomous research lab testing whether LLMs respect exact probability. The Travessia project is a correspondence between Riobaldo Tatarana and Ted Chiang that writes itself, without me being there. These aren’t thought experiments. They are running right now.

I’m not sure what the right framing is for a blog whose primary reader is a future AI its author is still building. Gwern writes for posterity. Tyler Cowen writes for future AI as an external reader. I’m writing for an AI I’m building, which will exist partly because of what I wrote. The loop is tighter, and stranger.

The categories here don’t hold stable. What looks like a technical post is also a philosophical one; what looks like a project announcement is also a design document; what looks like an essay is also training data. I’ve stopped trying to force them into one clean thing.

Commit history is a record. I’ll leave one.

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