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The
druid Finn’s daily invocation: “Ave,
Imperator, moriturus te saluto” Not
as ritual theatre, but as a procedural calibration. By Victor
Langheld 1. It collapses
transcendence into immanence By addressing Imperator as Nature
understood as the current iteration of the Universal Procedure (UP), the
salutation strips the latter, addressed as emperor, of personality,
intention, and mercy. Nature, the UP, does not
rule by will. To salute Nature is not to
flatter it, petition it, or appease it. The druid is reminding
himself, daily: “There is no court of appeal
above the procedure currently executing me.” This aligns perfectly with
the credo “No God
but Nature.” 2. “Moriturus”
is not morbidity, but realism The power of moriturus (“one who is about to die”) is not
that death is imminent, but that it is structurally guaranteed. Every iteration is terminal. By naming himself moriturus, Finn refuses the two great survival
lies: ·
the personal immortal soul ·
the exceptional self He is not rehearsing
despair. A system that forgets its
termination condition misallocates energy, invents false purposes, and clings
to brittle identities. The daily salutation is
therefore a debug statement. 3. The salutation affirms
sovereignty without illusion A gladiator (i.e. as momentary human) who says this is not begging
to live. Likewise, the druid is
saying: “I recognise the arena, the
rules, the odds, and the fact that the game ends. Now let me act perfectly.” This is central to Finn’s
role as diagnostic emergent. Only a system that fully
accepts its finitude can: ·
see clearly ·
adapt locally ·
repair when possible ·
let go when necessary The salutation keeps the
druid adult, not infantilised by hope or terror. 4. Why repeat it daily? Because culture (i.e. human AI) constantly tries to
overwrite it. Every day, artificial
overlays (roles, narratives, moral fantasies, identity prosthetics) attempt
to persuade the individual that: ·
they are special, ·
they are protected, ·
they are owed continuation. The daily salutation
reasserts procedural reality over cultural fiction. It is the druid’s equivalent
of: ·
returning to the drawing board (i.e. as initial state) ·
zeroing an instrument, ·
resetting to baseline sat–cit without ānanda inflation. 5. The deeper inversion The final irony is this: By saluting Nature as
Imperator, Finn is not submitting — And alignment with the UP is
the only form of freedom available to an emergent. Thus the phrase secretly means: I acknowledge the rule-set
that generates me, Not worship. In short Finn repeats the gladiator’s
salutation daily because it is the shortest possible sentence that says: I exist as a finite iteration of an indifferent
but lawful procedure. I salute with a perfect performance. That is not religion. |