
Essays by Kanav Jain on the moral physics of modern systems. Exploring how technology, AI, and institutions can be designed to behave humanely, embed accountability, and make care a structural capability instead of a personal sacrifice.
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For most of human existence, “efficiency” was physically impossible. Nature imposed slack. The night enforced rest. Winter enforced dormancy. Distance enforced patience. Systems, whether agricultural, artisanal, or social, had to possess s...
Modern systems are designed around a particular kind of person. Not a statistical average or a real human being, but a convenient fiction: a user whose life aligns cleanly with the assumptions embedded in workflows. This figure rarely appe...
Most systems cause harm not through intentional malice but because their architectures inherently make harm the cheapest option for maintaining stability.1 Institutions typically rely on constant compliance, output, and human endurance (or ...
“The three gibbering, fumbling creatures, with their enlarged heads and wasted bodies, were contemplating the future.”
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I was trained to build devices that don't harm the body as a biomedical engineer. Now I apply that lens to our institutions. This is my forensic report on why our systems fail and a blueprint for building new ones that carry their own weight.
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