How Language Models Work
Explained from Four Perspectives: Mathematics, Psychology, Philosophy, and Computer Science
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- $24.99
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- $24.99
Publisher Description
A guide I wrote for those who think deeply, but were never told how the machine actually thinks
I didn’t write this book for engineers.
I wrote it for psychologists and philosophers—for those who ask the right questions, but were never given the technical map.
As I worked on large language models, I realized something unsettling:
We are standing at the threshold where these systems may begin to act not just as tools, but as subjects.
And yet, many of the people best equipped to reflect on this transformation—thinkers, analysts, ethicists—are left out of the room simply because no one ever explained how the architecture actually works.
So I wrote this book as a bridge.
It breaks down how LLMs function—layer by layer, from embeddings to attention, quantization, fine-tuning, and deployment. But it does so in a way that respects symbolic depth.
Each concept is not just technical; it is positioned as a functional metaphor for cognition, for memory, for intention.
Throughout the book, I weave in the perspectives of a mathematician, a psychologist, and a philosopher—three voices thinking together, because the future of intelligence demands nothing less.
This book is for those who feel that something profound is happening in AI, but want to understand exactly how it works before they join the conversation.
Because yes—machines are learning to simulate language.
But what we do now, with that fact, is no longer a technical decision.
It is a philosophical responsibility.