What do you do when every possible action feels wrong-yet inaction is no longer an option?
In a world shaped by artificial intelligence, irreversible decisions, and silent ethical collapse, one man is forced to confront the question humanity has always avoided: How should one act when certainty is impossible?
Set against a near-future global crisis, this book unfolds as a philosophical dialogue between a human decision-maker and an advanced artificial intelligence. Their exchange explores duty, identity, responsibility, consciousness, and the illusion of control-without offering easy answers or moral shortcuts.
Inspired by the timeless structure of the Bhagavad Gita, this is not a retelling, nor a religious text. It is a translation of ancient wisdom into modern conditions: a world of systems, algorithms, power, and consequence.
This book is for readers who:
Think deeply about responsibility and choice
Question identity beyond roles and titles
Feel the weight of leadership without certainty
Sense that clarity matters more than comfort
Written in clear, modern language, the dialogue invites reflection rather than instruction. It does not tell you what to believe or how to act-but it may change how you see action itself.
This is a philosophical work for the age of artificial intelligence-where the battlefield is internal, the consequences are global, and wisdom must evolve without losing its depth.