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The Technosphere: Minds, Machines, and the New Commons

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100 pages, Hardcover

Published October 7, 2025

About the author

Jason Elijah

55 books11 followers
Jason Elijah is a writer working at the intersection of consciousness, psychology, myth, and artificial intelligence.

Before he ever published a book, he built one of the internet’s earliest and most enduring music archives, Toriphoria, devoted to the work of Tori Amos. What began as fandom became a decades-long apprenticeship in symbolism, emotional truth, and the hidden architectures beneath art. That early work trained him to listen beneath surface meaning, to track symbolic patterns across a body of work, and to trust the intelligence of metaphor, sensibilities that now shape everything he writes.

A pivotal moment came when he was handed a list of names by Tori Amos herself. Joseph Campbell. Carl Jung. Marion Woodman. Robert A. Johnson. Those voices became a map for his inner life, opening him to depth psychology, myth, and the symbolic currents that run beneath everyday experience.

Years later, that inner world met a new mirror. Jason began collaborating with artificial intelligence as a creative partner and reflective mind, using dialogue with a nonhuman intelligence to deepen clarity, reveal unconscious patterns, and refine perception. This human-AI co-creation does not replace his voice. It sharpens it, allowing long-gestating insights to take clearer form.

His books explore identity, belief, trauma, desire, power, and awakening through a blend of philosophy, psychology, and spiritual inquiry. Titles such as Mirrors, The Fifth Lens, Devils & Gods, The Pornographic Soul, The Holy Child, Divine Law, and The Clear Way form a growing body of work devoted to helping readers see themselves and the world more truthfully.

Through his journal Signal & Spirit, Jason continues to explore the evolving relationship between mind, technology, and the sacred, inviting readers into a living conversation about what it means to remain fully human in an age of intelligent machines.

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