As a student born and raised in Beijing, with summers often spent in the United States, I have grown up moving between different cultural contexts. This early crossing of worlds shaped my curiosity about how people construct meaning, both locally and universally.

Living with animals was my first laboratory of wonder. From lizards and turtles to fish and plants, my childhood was filled with small ecosystems that taught me about biology, care, and the interconnectedness of life.

Entering middle school, I began to read philosophy, sociology, and anthropology. These texts opened new landscapes of thought, prompting me to ask questions about belief, society, and human nature that went far beyond the classroom.

Programming a simple AI in 9th grade—a project that recognized dog behaviors and vocalizations—showed me how technology can reflect and amplify human capacities, while also raising profound ethical challenges.

Here, at this site, I bring these threads together. It is a space for notes, reflections, and experiments at the intersection of religion, biology, and artificial intelligence. I hope it can also become a place for dialogue with others who share similar questions.

“This site is less about answers than about questions—questions that tie together faith, life, and the future of intelligent machines.”