Agustin V. Startari (b. 1982) is a linguist and researcher specialized in the structural conditions of authority, with academic training in Historical Sciences and Linguistics at the University of the Republic (Uruguay). His current work investigates how formal grammar produces legitimacy in artificial intelligence, law, and institutional discourse, with particular focus on reglas compiladas and the disappearance of agency in machine-executed language.
He has published original research on syntactic sovereignty, impersonal authority structures, ecclesiastical historiography, and doctrinal systems such as Buddhism, combining critical analysis of primary sources with formal linguistic models. His methodological core is grounded in structural analysis, cross-disciplinary logic, and the epistemology of executable systems.
In addition to his academic research, he is the author of historical and political fiction marked by narrative rigor and conceptual depth. Across all formats, his work maintains a strict commitment to structural clarity, traceable reasoning, and intellectual autonomy.
Ethos
I do not use artificial intelligence to write what I don’t know. I use it to challenge what I do. I write to reclaim the voice in an age of automated neutrality. My work is not outsourced. It is authored.
— Agustin V. Startari