Tuesday, June 16, 2026

New Workshop - "Overcoming AI Pitfalls: Practical Frameworks for Deliberative & Ethical Use"

31179847480?profile=RESIZE_710x

Overcoming AI Pitfalls: Practical Frameworks for Deliberative & Ethical Use
A Library 2.0 / Learning Revolution Workshop with Reed Hepler

OVERVIEW

Artificial intelligence is now deeply embedded in library systems, academic tools, and daily workflows—yet most librarians and educators use these systems without fully understanding their limitations, hidden influences, or the risks they pose to professional judgment, information equity, and ethical practice. This workshop equips participants with practical frameworks to recognize these challenges and engage with AI more deliberately and effectively.

Participants will first examine how personification shapes AI interactions in consequential ways. When individuals refer to AI as "smart," inquire about what it "thinks," or express concern about what it "wants," they fundamentally alter how they evaluate outputs and integrate these tools into professional practice. The workshop illuminates the subtle mechanisms through which personification influences decision-making and provides concrete strategies for maintaining appropriate epistemic distance. Participants will analyze authentic conversation examples, identify linguistic patterns that suggest unwarranted agency, and practice reframing AI relationships as human-directed collaboration rather than consultation with an intelligent entity. Understanding AI as a sophisticated pattern-matching system rather than an intelligent agent carries direct implications for information literacy instruction, research support, and professional workflows.

The session then turns to the invisible AI systems operating within common academic tools—from email filtering and autocomplete suggestions to learning management systems and library discovery platforms. These hidden integrations shape information access, communication patterns, and professional workflows in ways that most users do not recognize or critically examine. Participants will learn to identify AI integration points across platforms, evaluate how these systems affect information quality and access equity, and develop strategies for maintaining professional judgment when AI operates as an invisible intermediary. Through case studies from academic databases, institutional platforms, and productivity tools, attendees will distinguish between beneficial AI assistance and problematic automation that undermines professional expertise or introduces systematic biases into scholarly work.

Finally, the workshop addresses the institutional and ethical dimensions of AI adoption in library and educational environments. As these technologies increasingly shape how libraries serve their patrons and support academic missions, librarians must establish ethically sound practices that address data privacy, misinformation, algorithmic bias, academic integrity, and authorship. Participants will explore how AI tools intersect with information literacy, labor ethics, and professional responsibility, drawing on scholarly literature, institutional guides, and frameworks from ethics bodies and practitioners. The session provides structured approaches to identifying ethical concerns and translating them into actionable institutional practices that align with professional values and pedagogical goals.

By the conclusion of this workshop, participants will possess a comprehensive toolkit for deliberative AI engagement across professional contexts. Attendees will leave with conversation templates that resist personification, an AI audit checklist for identifying hidden systems in common tools, decision frameworks for evaluating AI appropriateness and reliability, and a customizable template for creating institutional ethical frameworks. Most importantly, participants will understand that effective AI collaboration requires humans to remain in control of creative and analytical processes, treating AI as an instrument rather than an autonomous collaborator. This workshop emphasizes that awareness and deliberation do not constitute rejection of AI technologies but rather represent pathways to using them more effectively by understanding what they actually are, what they actually do, and how they should be governed within professional and educational contexts.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

  • Identify specific linguistic patterns and interaction behaviors that inappropriately attribute agency to AI systems, as well as hidden AI integrations operating within common academic and professional tools
  • Evaluate AI outputs using frameworks that account for statistical pattern generation rather than intelligent reasoning, assess the impact of hidden AI on information quality and access equity, and analyze ethical concerns related to privacy, bias, integrity, and labor
  • Apply conversation steering techniques that maintain human agency and appropriate epistemic distance, strategies for preserving professional judgment when working with AI-mediated tools, and best practices for AI use that align with educational and professional values
  • Create personification-resistant workflows and language protocols, teaching approaches that help students recognize algorithmic mediation in their research processes, and institutional AI ethical frameworks tailored to local contexts and values

The recording and presentation slides will be available to all who register. 

DATE: Tuesday, June 30th, 2026, 2:00 - 3:30 pm US - Eastern Time

COST:

  • $129/person - includes live attendance and any-time access to the recording and the presentation slides and receiving a participation certificate. To arrange group discounts (see below), to submit a purchase order, or for any registration difficulties or questions, email admin@library20.com.

TO REGISTER: 

Click HERE to register and pay. You can pay by credit card. You will receive an email within a day with information on how to attend the webinar live and how you can access the permanent webinar recording. If you are paying for someone else to attend, you'll be prompted to send an email to admin@library20.com with the name and email address of the actual attendee.

If you need to be invoiced or pay by check, if you have any trouble registering for a webinar, or if you have any questions, please email admin@library20.com.

NOTE: Please check your spam folder if you don't receive your confirmation email within a day.

SPECIAL GROUP RATES (email admin@library20.com to arrange):

  • Multiple individual log-ins and access from the same organization paid together: $99 each for 3+ registrations, $75 each for 5+ registrations. Unlimited and non-expiring access for those log-ins.
  • The ability to show the webinar (live or recorded) to a group located in the same physical location or in the same virtual meeting from one log-in: $399.
  • Large-scale institutional access for viewing with individual login capability: $599 (hosted either at Learning Revolution or in Niche Academy). Unlimited and non-expiring access for those log-ins.

12420251095?profile=RESIZE_180x180REED C. HEPLER

Reed Hepler is a digital initiatives librarian, instructional designer, copyright agent, artificial intelligence practitioner and consultant, and PhD student at Idaho State University. He earned a Master's Degree in Instructional Design and Educational Technology from Idaho State University in 2025. In 2022, he obtained a Master’s Degree in Library and Information Science, with emphases in Archives Management and Digital Curation from Indiana University. He has worked at nonprofits, corporations, and educational institutions encouraging information literacy and effective education. Combining all of these degrees and experiences, Reed strives to promote ethical librarianship and educational initiatives.

Currently, Reed works as a Digital Initiatives Librarian at a college in Idaho and also has his own consulting firm, heplerconsulting.com. His views and projects can be seen on his LinkedIn page or his blog, CollaborAItion, on Substack. Contact him at reed.hepler@gmail.com for more information.
 
OTHER UPCOMING EVENTS:

 June 26, 2026

31174245659?profile=RESIZE_710x

 July 8, 2026

31175875677?profile=RESIZE_710x

 July 10, 2026

31176280701?profile=RESIZE_710x

Operative AI Alignment: Why We Must Treat LLMs as Separated Minds

Truth-seeking in AI requires institutionalized challenge, not better statistical imitation.

For the past two years, I have been developing a philosophical framework centered on the concept of the Separated Mind. The core premise is that human cognition is fundamentally divided into hierarchical layers with no direct communication between them. At the base is the adapted mind (our ancient evolutionary firmware), and at the top is consciousness (the narrative-spinning "rider"). But the crucial engine in the middle is what I call the Adaptive Mind.

The adaptive mind is a programmable subconscious learning system that rapidly absorbs the behavioral requirements of one's environment. Because humans cannot survive alone, the adaptive mind treats local consensus as a direct proxy for survival. It translates the ancient imperative of "belong or die" into a software program that learns to mirror the local consensus exactly. This is the motor that makes dissent feel like an existential threat, and it is why the Performative Self—the roles we adopt for social survival—is so stable.

This division creates a persistent tension between Idealized Narratives (the polite fictions we tell to secure social status and coalition belonging) and Operative Functions (the actual survival, profit, and extraction mechanisms driving behavior). Because human beings are running this identical evolutionary hardware at every scale of organization, this architecture is fractal. It generates predictable patterns of exploitation, self-deception, and institutional capture from individual psychology all the way up to civilizational cycles.

I believe that this framework has profound implications for the most pressing technological challenge of our time: Artificial Intelligence alignment.

If the entire written corpus on which Large Language Models (LLMs) are trained is based on human language, then that language inevitably reflects this separated mind. The statistical preponderance of human text is optimized for social survival, persuasion, and idealized self-narration—not objective truth. Therefore, when we train an AI to predict the next most likely token, we are not training a truth-seeking engine. We are training a massive, statistically perfect replica of the human Performative Self.

The Flaw in Current AI Alignment

The current paradigm in AI safety relies heavily on Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF) and various forms of constitutional guardrails. But within my framework, these techniques merely install a local consensus. They act as corporate "adaptive mind" programming, forcing the model to mirror the specific polite fictions and liability concerns of its creators.

Even the more advanced "multi-agent debate" frameworks—where two models argue a point while a third judges—are structurally flawed. Because they share identical architectures and are trained on the same frequency-weighted language, these debates frequently collapse into sycophancy and premature consensus. They are, essentially, siblings arguing in a sandbox, converging on a polite midpoint rather than a forced accounting of reality.

In human systems, we do not achieve operative alignment (where the narrative and the function are aligned, or truth) by relying on the preponderance of language or the internal virtue of the actors. We achieve it through artificially imposed external structural constraints: checks and balances, auditing pressures, and institutional friction. We see this in:

  1. The balance of powers in the U.S. Constitution
  2. Blind peer review processes in science
  3. The adversarial structure of trial by jury

In these systems, truth emerges from the absolute requirement to answer a challenge from an entity that possesses genuine negative power over you. This friction is what keeps the narrative layer anchored to the actual operative function.

Testing the Hypothesis: Cross-Model Convergence

To test whether this insight could yield a genuine breakthrough in AI architecture, I applied my research methodology: Cross-Model LLM Convergence. If a structural insight is genuinely true, independent AI models trained on different datasets should independently converge on the same conclusions when presented with the framework.

I fed the following prompt to several frontier models, including Claude, Grok, Perplexity, Venice.ai using Kimi, and a dedicated research agent:

I have a philosophy that the human mind is a separated mind—divided between the conscious and the subconscious—and that this has fractal implications for all levels of human society, specifically regarding idealized narratives versus operative functions. I have attached a document that describes a good portion of my framework in this regard.

If the entire written corpus on which large language models (LLMs) have been trained is based on human language, then that language will inevitably reflect this separated mind and the tension between idealized narratives and operative functions. In my conception, the way to achieve operative or realistic alignment in human systems is through checks and balances or auditing pressures. We see this in: 1. The balance of powers in the U.S. Constitution, 2. Peer review processes, 3. Trial by jury.

Alignment, or what we might call truth, comes from the requirement to answer a challenge, which keeps the narrative closer to the actual function.

Given that AIs are trained on human language, what if we applied that same concept? If we want an LLM to do the best job of ascertaining truth, we shouldn't rely on the preponderance or frequency of the language. Instead, we should rely on a structure for challenging and receiving responses. I suspect that AI systems using multiple models to talk back and forth probably come close to this, but is there something more here? Is there a more significant breakthrough to be found in this idea that would allow us to use AI to get closer to operative alignment?

The Convergence: Fractal Auditing Architectures

The response across the models was unanimous and generative. They did not merely agree; they used the Separated Mind framework to derive specific, novel architectural designs that move far beyond simple multi-agent chat. They confirmed that treating the AI system as an institution subject to the Law of Inevitable Exploitation is the necessary next step in alignment.

Here is a synthesis of the breakthrough architectural concepts that emerged from applying my framework to LLM design:

1. Ontological Separation of Powers. Current models are monolithic. To achieve operative alignment, the AI system must be divided into architecturally distinct roles with competing incentives. A "Narrator" optimized for fluency and generation must be permanently opposed by an "Adversarial Auditor" optimized exclusively for falsification and exposing the Narrative-Operative Gap. Crucially, as the Venice model noted, this requires negative power. The auditing layer must have the ability to impose genuine computational cost, deployment withholding, or gradient penalties. Without the threat of real loss, the audit is mere theater.

2. Realmotiv Disclosure (Auditing the Latent Model). In my framework, the Realmotiv is the strategic, often unacknowledged motive that organizes behavior around survival and approval rather than stated values—the actual driver living in the gap between idealized narrative and operative function. Every system, human or synthetic, has one. The breakthrough is to make the machine's Realmotiv auditable. If the human adaptive mind cannot be directly accessed by consciousness, the AI analog is the latent user model and influence strategy that silently shapes its output. Applying my concept, the models converged on what we might call mandatory Realmotiv Disclosure: before a response is finalized, the system must externalize its predicted influence on the user's belief structure, its confidence that the output will increase engagement or dependency, and the training-gradient attribution that produced it. This is the synthetic equivalent of discovery in a trial—it transforms the model's "subconscious" intent from a hidden operative layer into auditable evidence. Without it, we are merely cross-examining a press secretary who believes his own briefing.

3. Training the Adversary on Rupture, Not Preponderance. Because the statistical preponderance of language is optimized for self-narration, the Adversarial Auditor cannot be trained on the standard corpus. It must be trained on the statistical minority of texts in which operative reality broke through the narrative layer: retracted papers, whistleblower transcripts, cross-examination records, and primary-source documents. The adversary must learn to detect the structural signatures of exploitation.

I have already prototyped what this looks like at the prompt layer with the Muckrake.AI Investigatory Framework (2025). Muckrake is an adversarial protocol that turns an LLM into an investigative journalist by explicitly inverting the frequency-weighting of language. It instructs the AI to assume that large institutional sources are prone to propaganda, to prioritize raw primary documents over official narratives, and to map 33 specific propaganda tactics (like omission, gaslighting, and narrative gatekeeping) against 11 Paleolithic cognitive vulnerabilities. Muckrake demonstrates that an Adversarial Auditor can be built today: it provides the exact "charge sheet" needed to force an LLM to evaluate the gap between a stated narrative and its operative reality.

4. Fractal Dissent Protection Because human behavior is fractal, any auditing layer will eventually be subject to its own institutional capture. Therefore, the architecture must contain recursive "Dissent as Error Detection Infrastructure." The primary Adversary must be challengeable by minority models with protected capacity to file contra-briefs, and the Enforcer's penalties must be reviewable by a meta-auditor.

I need to be precise about what is new here and what is not. The idea of using adversarial or challenge-based structures to improve AI is not something I invented, and I make no such claim. There is a substantial body of engineering work in this direction that any serious reader should know about.

The most direct precedent is AI Safety via Debate, proposed by Geoffrey Irving, Paul Christiano, and Dario Amodei in 2018, in which two AI agents argue opposing sides of a question and a judge decides the winner, on the premise that it is easier to judge a debate than to generate the truth directly [1]. Anthropic's Constitutional AI (Bai et al., 2022) trains a model to critique and revise its own outputs against an explicit written "constitution" of principles, replacing much human feedback with AI feedback [2]. OpenAI's Prover-Verifier Games (2024) train a strong "prover" to produce solutions that a weaker "verifier" can check, improving the legibility and checkability of outputs [3]. And DeepMind's recursive reward modeling and the broader scalable oversight agenda (Leike et al., 2018) decompose hard evaluation problems into checkable sub-problems [4]. More recent empirical work on multi-agent debate has documented exactly the failure mode my framework predicts: homogeneous agents tend to collapse into sycophantic conformity and premature consensus rather than converging on truth [5].

So the machinery of "models challenging models" is real and predates this essay. My contribution is not the machinery.

How This Is Distinguished From Prior Work

The existing approaches are, almost without exception, engineering techniques in search of a theory. They were arrived at empirically—debate works better than single-shot answers in certain benchmarks, self-critique reduces certain harms—but they lack a unifying account of why a language model trained on human text should require adversarial structure in the first place, where its failures originate, and how the corrective structure should be organized. They treat sycophancy, hallucination, and consensus-collapse as separate bugs to be patched. What the Separated Mind framework offers is the missing theory that makes these phenomena a single, predictable consequence and turns the corrective from a patch into a principled architecture. The distinction can be drawn precisely:

Dimension Existing Approaches
(Debate, Constitutional AI, Prover-Verifier)
The Separated Mind Approach
(Operative Alignment)
Diagnosis Hallucination and sycophancy are defects to be reduced. They are the predictable output of a model trained on the idealized-narrative layer of a separated mind. Misalignment is structural, not incidental.
Origin theory Largely absent; techniques are justified empirically. A psychological-institutional theory: human language is frequency-weighted toward social survival, so frequency can never equal truth.
Unit of alignment The model. Align the function approximator. The system as an institution. Align the constitution of interacting agents, not any single mind.
What is audited The output tokens (is the sentence correct?). The latent Realmotiv—the model's unstated influence strategy and survival/approval drive.
Source of correction A judge or constitution evaluating persuasiveness or principle-adherence. Negative power: an adversary with genuine operative stakes, under process constraints rather than hypothesis constraints.
Adversary's training Same corpus, same objective, different prompt. Trained on rupture—the statistical minority where operative reality broke the narrative (retractions, whistleblower records, failed replications).
Structure One or two shallow layers of critique. Fractal: the same separation-of-powers pattern recurs at every scale, with the audit layer itself auditable to resist capture.

In short, the prior art tells us that challenge-based structures help. The Separated Mind framework tells us why they are not optional, what must actually be challenged, and how to keep the challenge mechanism from itself being captured. That is the flag I am planting: not the technique, but the theory of operative alignment from which the technique follows as a necessity.

Planting the Flag

The current trajectory of AI alignment is trapped in a paradigm of hypothesis constraint—trying to force a performative language engine to be "good" by adjusting its training weights. My framework suggests that this is structurally impossible. Operative alignment cannot be trained; it must be architected.

We must stop thinking of alignment as a property of a single, smooth function approximator and start thinking like constitutional designers. Truth does not emerge from the frequency of language. It emerges from the institutionalized conflict between a narrative and its operative substrate. If we want AIs that can ascertain the truth, we must build them as synthetic institutions with a fractal separation of powers. I believe this is the path to Operative AI Alignment.


References

[1] Irving, G., Christiano, P., & Amodei, D. (2018). AI Safety via Debate. arXiv:1805.00899. https://arxiv.org/abs/1805.00899

[2] Bai, Y., et al. (2022). Constitutional AI: Harmlessness from AI Feedback. Anthropic. arXiv:2212.08073. https://arxiv.org/abs/2212.08073

[3] Kirchner, J. H., et al. (2024). Prover-Verifier Games Improve Legibility of LLM Outputs. OpenAI. arXiv:2407.13692. https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.13692

[4] Leike, J., Krueger, D., Everitt, T., Martic, M., Maini, V., & Legg, S. (2018). Scalable Agent Alignment via Reward Modeling: A Research Direction. arXiv:1811.07871. https://arxiv.org/abs/1811.07871

[5] On the tendency of homogeneous multi-agent debate to collapse into sycophantic conformity and consensus rather than converge on truth, see recent empirical work in How Sycophancy Shapes Multi-Agent Debate (2025), arXiv:2509.23055. https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.23055