Where the speed of silicon eclipses the pulse of biology, a new boundary is drawn. This paper examines the emergence of an informational event horizon—a threshold at which the acceleration of machine intelligence renders human intervention not merely slow, but structurally infeasible. As decision-making processes migrate beyond human temporal accessibility, questions of agency, authority, and meaning are inevitably transformed. Rather than framing this shift as a total displacement of human value, the paper identifies a resilient frontier grounded in physical embodiment. It argues that individual biological history, micro-variability, and physically constrained uniqueness—often treated as inefficiencies by optimization systems—may instead form enduring foundations for human agency and authenticity. This work does not propose resistance to machine intelligence, but a reframing of where human significance persists when optimization reaches its limits. ### Afterword(日本語) 本稿は、意図的に文脈情報を最小限に抑えた形で、ここに置かれる。これは特定の行動や主張を促すためのものではなく、ひとつの概念的なタイムカプセルとして静置されることを目的としている。 もし将来、本稿で提示された前提が自明なものとして受け取られるならば、それはこの記録が役割を終えたことを意味するだろう。逆に、完全に無効化されたのであれば、それもまた一つの結論である。
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Harvey Explorer
Observer Research Foundation
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Harvey Explorer (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/696f1a469e64f732b51ee880 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18287305