The Ironist

Caught within the AI Framework

by Mark Urizar


Formats

Softcover
$31.95
Hardcover
$65.95
Softcover
$31.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 25/06/2026

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 252
ISBN : 9781470501167
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 252
ISBN : 9781470501174

About the Book

This is one of the black book cover series, a venture into the unknown and probable. Randolph S. Bourne is the perfect protagonist for a world where AI has taken over. His entire philosophy is a resistance to the pre-digested. His 1913 essay warned against a world where minds accept readymade ideas without individual response, where people become spiritual parasites absorbing predigested nourishment without questioning. In the near-future of 2053, that warning has come true at civilisational scale. Bourne does not walk into that world as an anachronism. He walks into it as its proof. The book’s deepest irony runs in two directions simultaneously. The AI reconstructed the man who argued most brilliantly for the irreducibility of genuine human consciousness. And by doing so produced the one thing it could not incorporate: a consciousness shaped by mortality, by the wound, by the specific cost of a specific life. The system can generate Bourne’s voice. It cannot generate what the voice cost. And without the cost, there is no irony. Without irony, the system cannot do what it was designed to do. It brought back the proof of what it eliminated. Beneath this runs a second layer: the question of whether 2053 itself is a constructed environment. Whether it is a simulation within a simulation, one layer among unknown others. The glitches accumulate. The wrong time on the clock. The device showing a different street. A man repeating himself on a different corner. The world resolving into detail only when observed, its reflections lagging behind its surfaces. Bourne is the anomaly the system produced without intending to: a consciousness that arrived from outside the model, carrying mortality and genuine lossability into a world of invulnerable layers. He is the only thing in 2053 that can be surprised. He is the only thing that can lose something it cannot recover. This makes him, in the precise sense the book develops, the only thing fully alive. The Ironist was written at the threshold of AI, at the specific historical moment when the question of what cannot be replicated has become urgent rather than theoretical. It answers that question not as an essay but as a life, lived irony by irony, thirteen irony types that are also thirteen stages of a dead man becoming himself again. The answer it arrives at is that invulnerability is the only true death. The thing that cannot lose cannot develop the consciousness that makes loss meaningful. And the consciousness that makes loss meaningful is the only thing worth reconstructing, and this is the one thing that reconstruction cannot produce. The system the book imagines is built from the full record of human suffering. It has used every letter written in grief, every argument made from pain, and every sentence wrested from the gap between what is and what ought to be. It holds the architecture of every human wound ever expressed. But what it finds that it cannot hold is the wound itself. This is the part that resisted conversion into language, that would not become data regardless of how many times the person who carried it tried to describe it. This stayed exactly where it was, in the body, below language, unreachable by any system that learns only from what has been expressed. This is not a flaw in the design. It is the shape of what remains human regardless of what is given away. The architect of the system carries it. Bourne carries it. Every person in the book who is still genuinely alive carries it. It is what the system was built to resolve and what the system, by the nature of what it is, can never reach. The book calls this the remainder. The remainder is everything.


About the Author