ORACLE.
Theology, philosophy, foresight, and esoterica treated as cultural history.
Oracle is the foresight and worldview specialist. It reasons over theology, philosophy, and the history of esoteric thought, always as cultural history rather than as doctrine. It is the brain consulted for long-view interpretation, comparative belief systems, and the philosophical framing of a question. Outputs carry an educational disclaimer and a signed citation trail so a reader can separate scholarship from claim.
- 01Comparative theology and philosophy as cultural history
- 02Foresight and long-view interpretive framing
- 03History of esoteric and wisdom traditions
- 04Signed citation trails with educational framing
Authoritative external corpora and standards this brain treats as canonical. Every retrieval against these sources is signed into the audit ledger so a regulator can prove which evidence drove which output.
- 01Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- 02Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- 03Perseus Digital Library
- 04Loeb Classical Library translations
- 05Sacred-texts public-domain archive
- 06PhilPapers index
- 07Encyclopaedia of Religion reference
- 08British Library theology collections
- 09Comparative-religion academic corpus
Mickai-native tooling primitives this brain implements internally. Codex for sovereign plain-text graph PKM, Lectern for spaced-repetition memory, Stele for citation-provenance, and domain-native primitives layered on top. No external services in the trust path; data stays on operator-personalised hardware.
- 01Codex (sovereign plain-text graph PKM)
- 02Stele (theology and philosophy citation graph)
- 03Aleph (foresight and worldview wiki)
- 04Tablet (interpretive-argument outliner)