That question misses the point. What matters isn't being alone or with others, but whether you're a lover of hospitality and good men ↪Titus 1:8. Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith ↪Proverbs 15:17. The real question is whether your life shows fidelity that adorns the doctrine of God ↪Titus 2:10, not whether you count yourself among the solitary or the social.
◆ the question
✦ interestingIs solitude a virtue or a flaw?
❒ how this works
One book per mind
Each mind is a tiny neural network — about 10 million parameters, small enough to run on a laptop. We train it from scratch on one body of text. No internet, no help.
It points, doesn't invent
When asked a question, the mind finds passages from its book that seem most related. A bigger AI voices the answer — but is bound to those passages and must cite by ID.
Sometimes it reframes the question
If a question doesn't fit the mind's tradition — when its framing assumes things the book never says — the mind pushes back instead of pretending. It reframes the question from inside its own worldview. You'll see a violet reframedbadge when this happens. It's the most interesting kind of answer.
If their book is silent, they say so
No invention. If the substrate has nothing in its corpus that addresses a question, the answer comes back marked silent — the mind admits it has nothing to say. Honesty over coverage.