About SEO Kiosk · Digital Phenomenology
Welcome to SEO Kiosk – Digital Phenomenology, a digital publication and research space by Poul Goldschadt.
The site functions as an online hub for writing, classroom work, symbolic experimentation, and practical tools related to meaning-making in the digital age.
At its core, the project explores how technology, language, and culture shape human experience. Essays, notes, and visual experiments are organized around themes such as Thoughts, Ideas, Stories, Memetic Engineering, and Concept Design. Together they form an evolving archive of reflections on consciousness, media, artificial intelligence, and interpretation.
Alongside the publication, the project includes a practical classroom dimension.
At https://goldschadt.com you will find lesson plans and symbolic literacy materials designed for students and teachers navigating AI, media culture, and digital thinking. The classroom space translates philosophical ideas into usable frameworks: how to interpret content, detect nonsense, and understand how symbols shape perception.
Running in parallel is Memecraft – The Symbolic Lexicon, an interactive environment available at
https://memecraft2.glide.page.
Memecraft treats memes, images, and stories as symbolic tools rather than disposable content. Through quests, uploads, and interpretation, users can explore how meaning circulates and evolves inside digital culture. The goal is to build a living archive where symbols are examined, played with, and re-interpreted.
The broader concept of SEO Kiosk can be understood as a metaphor for how the mind organizes and navigates information. Just as a kiosk presents knowledge in a structured and accessible way, the project explores how humans search, filter, and construct meaning in digital environments. In this sense, the “kiosk” is both interface and metaphor — a model of attention, navigation, and interpretation.
Poul Goldschadt is a writer and educator with a background in Danish, literary science, and psychology from the University of Copenhagen. He has worked with information technology and programming in Denmark, the United States, and China. His work combines philosophy, media production, and web development, drawing on experience in music production, painting, video tools, and interactive platforms.
This site is an ongoing exploration rather than a finished system.
It invites readers to consider how digital environments influence thought, identity, and culture — and how symbolic literacy can help us navigate an increasingly mediated world.