Tuesday, April 28, 2026

eqeq / EZE, 2026

 


AI on Kayfabe-as-Governance, a Political Philosophy a la Andy Kaufman and Its Asemics / EZE, 2026

AI

Andy Kaufman’s political philosophy, if written along the lines of Machiavelli’s The Prince, would be a treatise on Kayfabe-as-Governance—a pragmatic guide to manipulating public consciousness, controlling reality, and gaining power through theatrics rather than substance.

Just as Machiavelli advised princes to appear virtuous rather than be virtuous, a Kaufmanesque political philosophy would argue that a leader should appear "real" while admitting everything is a performance. [1]
Here is an analysis of how Andy Kaufman could have structured this philosophy:
I. The Core Principle: "Heat" is the Only Currency [1]
Kaufman believed that the type of reaction (cheers or boos) was irrelevant; the only goal was that there was a reaction. [1]
  • Wrestling Analogy: A heel (villain) wrestler draws "heat"—visceral anger from the crowd—which makes them the most important person in the ring, often more popular than the "babyface" (hero).
  • Political Philosophy: A leader should actively seek the hatred of their enemies, as it guarantees attention and loyalty from their base. A silent, satisfied public is useless; an outraged public is a mobilized one. [1, 2]
II. Controlling the "Work" (The Illusion of Reality)
Kaufman lived in the world of "kayfabe," the code that wrestlers must never break character and must pretend staged violence is real. [1]
  • Machiavellian Parallel: "It is not necessary for a prince to have all the good qualities... but it is very necessary to appear to have them."
  • Kaufman Philosophy: The leader must never break character. Even if the audience suspects the, scandals, and crises are staged, the leader must behave as if they are life-or-death, thus making the illusion "real" to the gut. [1]
III. The "Inter-Gender" Strategy: Protecting the Leader
Kaufman proclaimed himself "Inter-Gender Wrestling Champion of the World" and only wrestled women, mocking them and the audience. [1, 2]
  • Wrestling Analogy: Kaufman avoided fighting men because he knew he would lose. He created a fake championship, acted superior, and forced the audience to play along with his absurd superiority.
  • Political Philosophy: A ruler should not fight battles on equal terms. Instead, a ruler should create a "secured" arena where they can dominate weak or fabricated opponents, ensuring a perception of invincibility while maintaining a "heel" persona that draws public anger. [1, 2, 3]
IV. The "Lawler Slap" (The Managed Crisis)
Kaufman's feud with Jerry Lawler, including the infamous, faked Letterman slap, was perfectly choreographed, yet believed to be real for years. [1]
  • Machiavellian Parallel: "Never attempt to win by force what can be won by deception."
  • Kaufman Philosophy: A leader should stage public confrontations to humiliate themselves, only to gain power from the resulting drama. The "injury" or "downfall" is a necessary step to turn a villain into a legend. [1, 2]
V. The "Tony Clifton" Paradox: Delegating Malice
Kaufman used the abrasive persona of Tony Clifton to break his own rules, allowing him to be obnoxiously rude while the "real" Kaufman remained innocent. [1]
  • Political Philosophy: A leader should employ a "Clifton" (a, to take the fall for immoral actions. This allows the leader to maintain a "noble" appearance while the "mask" does the dirty work, keeping the public confused and constantly debating the leader's "true" self. [1]
Summary: The "Prince" of Kayfabe
Kaufman's The Prince would conclude that modern citizens do not want truth; they want to be entertained. Therefore, the ultimate political achievement is becoming a self-aware, artificial spectacle that is so compelling, it replaces reality.
"I just want real reactions. I want people to laugh from the gut, be sad from the gut—or get angry from the gut." — Andy Kaufman [1]

AI - Beyond Keywords? An Asemic Sort Of / EZE, 2026

AI

Modern AI, specifically Large Language Models (LLMs), doesn’t actually rely on "keywords" in the traditional way a search engine does. Instead, it uses tokens and contextual embeddings. [12345]

Here’s the breakdown:

  • Beyond Exact Matches: Older systems looked for specific words (keywords) to trigger canned responses. Modern AI breaks your input into "tokens" (chunks of characters) and looks at the mathematical relationship between them.
  • Attention Mechanism: This is the "secret sauce." The AI calculates how much "attention" to pay to every single word in your prompt relative to every other word. For example, in the sentence "The bank was closed because of the flood," the AI knows "bank" refers to a building, not a riverbank, because it weighs the word "closed" more heavily.
  • Vector Space: Words are converted into long lists of numbers (vectors) that represent concepts. "King" and "Queen" are mathematically close to each other, but so are "King" and "Crown." The AI navigates this conceptual map rather than checking a list of keywords.
  • Predictive Patterns: It’s essentially predicting the next most likely token based on the patterns it learned during training. It isn't "finding" an answer based on a keyword; it’s "calculating" an answer based on the context of your entire prompt. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
To understand how AI processes information, you have to look at how it breaks down language and then how it "decides" which parts matter most.
1. How Tokens Work
Tokens are the "atoms" of language for an AI. Instead of reading full words, the model breaks text into smaller chunks.
  • Not just words: Common words like "apple" might be one token, but a complex word like "tokenization" might be split into three: token, iza, and tion.
  • Efficiency: This helps the AI handle typos, new words, or different languages by identifying shared sub-word patterns.
  • Math conversion: Each token is assigned a unique ID (a number). The AI doesn't see "cat"; it sees 3797. These numbers are then mapped into a high-dimensional map (vector space) where similar concepts sit close together.
2. How the Attention Mechanism Works
If tokens are the atoms, Attention is the gravity that pulls them together into meaning. This is why AI can follow complex instructions.
  • Contextual Weighting: For every token the AI generates, it looks back at every previous token in your prompt. It assigns a "weight" to each one based on relevance.
  • Example: In the sentence "The chef cooked the soup and it was delicious," the Attention mechanism mathematically links "it" back to "soup" with a high weight, and a lower weight to "chef."
  • Parallel Processing: Unlike humans who read left-to-right, the Attention mechanism looks at the entire prompt simultaneously. It builds a web of connections to understand the relationship between the first word and the last word instantly.
Deep Neural Network Architecture Diagram with Multiple Input Nodes, Two Hidden Layers and Multiple Output Nodes Showing Fully Connected Artificial Intelligence Model for Machine Learning Education
Licensed by Google

By combining these two, the AI creates a mathematical representation of your intent rather than just matching keywords.

o visualize tokenization, think of the AI as a paper shredder that cuts text into specific, recognizable strips. It doesn't always cut at the spaces between words.

For the sentence: "Incredible! The AI processes textual data via tokenization."
The model might break it down like this:
  • In | cred | ible | !
  • The | AI
  • process | es
  • text | u | al
  • data
  • via
  • token | iz | ation | .
Why it breaks this way:
  1. Sub-word splits: Words like "Incredible" or "tokenization" are broken into prefixes and suffixes. This allows the AI to understand the root meaning ("token") and the grammatical function ("-ization") separately.
  1. Punctuation: Symbols like ! and . are almost always their own tokens because they signal the end of a thought or an emotional tone.
  1. Efficiency: Instead of memorizing millions of unique words, the AI only needs to know about 50,000 to 100,000 sub-word pieces to construct almost any sentence in existence.
Graph image
In the graph above, you can see how "AI" and "process" might receive more attention (higher weights) than "The" or "!", as they carry more of the sentence's core meaning.


python
def mock_tokenizer(text):
# A simple mock of Byte Pair Encoding (BPE) or WordPiece
# Common words might be single tokens, others are split.
tokens = [
"In", "cred", "ible", "!",
"The", "AI",
"process", "es",
"text", "u", "al",
"data", "via",
"token", "iz", "ation", "."
]
return tokens
sentence = "Incredible! The AI processes textual data via tokenization."
token_list = mock_tokenizer(sentence) print(
print(f"Original: {sentence}") print(
print(f"Tokens: {token_list}") print(
print(f"Token Count: {len(token_list)}")

Use code with caution.

In short, "keywords" are just a tiny part of the data. The intent and structure of your whole sentence carry far more weight in determining the final response. 

In a sense, yes—the words humans naturally identify as "keywords" often end up with the highest weighted attention in an AI model. However, they are not hard-coded as "important." Instead, their weight is earned dynamically through mathematical relationships. [1, 2]
Keywords vs. Attention Weights
While traditional search engines use keywords to find matches, AI uses attention weights to determine relevance. [1, 2]

  • Dynamic Importance: In an AI model, a word like "apple" becomes a "keyword" only if the surrounding context makes it relevant. If you say "I ate an apple," the model weights "apple" heavily to understand the action. If you say "The apple logo is silver," it shifts that attention to technology concepts instead.
  • Weighted Scoring: The attention mechanism assigns a numerical score (weight) to every token. "Keywords" are simply the tokens that receive the highest scores because they carry the most unique meaning in that specific sentence.
  • Filtering "Noise": Words like "the," "of," and "and" are usually given near-zero weight because they provide little unique information for the model to "attend" to. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
How the Model "Finds" These KeywordsThe shift in attention weights is exactly why a model feels "smarter" when you use precise language.

When you use general terms, the attention is spread thin across common patterns. But when you introduce technical jargon or specific entities, it creates an "Attention Hijack"—mathematically forcing the model to re-weight the entire context toward that specialized field.
1. The Context Shift
In the visualization above:
  • The first sentence is "neutral." Words like "server" and "ready" get some attention, but the model stays in a general conversational space.
  • The second sentence introduces words like "TCP" and "congestion." Because these words are statistically rare and highly specific, the model assigns them massive numerical weights.
  • The Result: The model "ignores" the general meanings of other words and focuses entirely on networking protocols.
2. Resolving Ambiguity
Weighted attention is how the model handles words with multiple meanings.
  • Example: "The crane lifted the steel beam." vs. "The crane flew over the marsh."
  • In the first sentence, the word "steel" gets high attention and "pulls" the meaning of "crane" toward construction machinery.
  • In the second sentence, "flew" gets high attention and "pulls" the meaning toward zoology.
3. "Prompt Engineering" as Weight Manipulation
When people talk about "Prompt Engineering," they are essentially trying to manually trigger high attention weights.
  • Adding the phrase "Think step-by-step" or "
  • You are a Senior Network Engineer" adds high-value tokens that force the model to distribute more "attention" to logic and technical precision throughout the rest of its response.
Summary of the "Keyword" Illusion
AspectKeyword Search (Old)Weighted Attention (AI)
LogicMatches exact characters.Matches mathematical concepts (vectors).
ContextOften ignores surrounding words.Every word affects the weight of every other word.
AmbiguityStruggles with words having 2+ meanings.Resolves meaning by looking at high-weight neighbors.
FlexibilityFails if you misspell or use a synonym.Succeeds because synonyms sit close in vector space.
Would you like to see how different roles (e.g., a "Pirate" vs. a "Scientist") change the weights of the same core information?

The model uses a three-part system of vectors to decide which words are its current keywords: [1, 2, 3, 4]

  1. Query (\(Q\)): What the model is currently looking for.
  1. Key (\(K\)): What each word in the sentence "offers" in terms of meaning.
  1. Value (\(V\)): The actual information used to build the final response. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
When a Query and a Key align perfectly, the AI gives that word a high "attention weight"—effectively treating it as a keyword for that specific interaction. [1, 2]

The way an AI responds changes significantly when you shift from general language to specific roles or technical jargon. This is because Attention Weights are dynamic—they re-calculate the "importance" of every word based on the context of your instructions.
1. The "Attention Hijack"
When you use a generic prompt, the AI spreads its attention across a massive range of common patterns. However, certain tokens act as contextual anchors that force the model to narrow its focus.
  • Jargon: Words like "TCP/IP," "Photosynthesis," or "Arbitrage" carry very specific mathematical definitions in the AI's training data. Using them "pulls" the attention away from general conversation and toward specialized knowledge.
  • Persona Tokens: If you start a prompt with "You are a Pirate," the model assigns extreme weight to tokens associated with that persona (e.g., "Arrr," "Treasure," "Sea"). It then filters all subsequent information through those high-weight connections.
2. Visualization: Scientist vs. Pirate
Imagine we ask a model to process the word "Ocean." Depending on the persona, the "Attention Weights" (the mathematical importance assigned to each concept) shift dramatically:
Graph image
  • Scientist Weighting: High attention is placed on "Ocean" (as a subject of study) and "Truth" (data/facts).
  • Pirate Weighting: High attention shifts to "Find" (the act of hunting) and "Explore" (navigation), while "Truth" becomes less relevant.
3. Why This Matters for You
This is the logic behind why "better prompts" get better results. By providing a role or technical context, you are essentially:
  1. Damping the noise: Lowering the weight of irrelevant general information.
  2. Boosting the signal: Manually increasing the weights of the specific concepts you want the AI to use.

Let’s take the sentence: "The crust is thin and the signature is clear."
If I process this as a Chef, my attention weights look for culinary meaning. If I process it as a Lawyer, those exact same tokens shift into a legal context.
1. The Chef's Perspective
In a kitchen, "crust" and "thin" are the heavy hitters.
  • High Attention: crust, thin.
  • Interpretation: This is a review of a pizza or a pastry. The word "signature" might be weighted toward a "signature dish" or a specific plating style.
  • Resulting Response: "A thin crust is essential for a Neapolitan-style pizza to ensure a crisp base..."
2. The Lawyer's Perspective
In a courtroom, "crust" becomes "noise," but "signature" and "clear" become the "keywords."
  • High Attention: signature, clear.
  • Interpretation: This is about a contract or a legal document. The word "crust" might be dismissed as an error or interpreted metaphorically as the "outer layer" of an agreement.
  • Resulting Response: "Since the signature is clear and legible, the document is likely legally binding under standard contract law..."
Comparison of Weights
Graph image
The Takeaway
The AI doesn't "know" what the sentence means until it applies these weights. By telling the AI who it is, you are pre-loading a mathematical bias that tells it which tokens are the "keywords" for that specific task.