Experience the Intersection of Faith and Technology in Flight

The Book Explores How Spiritual Impulses and AI Reshape the Fate of a Skilled Fighter Pilot.

A book cover with an airplane on it.

Neurifact Review

David C. Hilmers, MD, MSEE, Colonel, USMC (Ret), 4-time NASA Astronaut

“Does God continue to reveal Himself in ways that advances in science only now allow us to discern? This is the fascinating question that is explored in Ken Watts novel, Neurifact. The author uses his naval aviation and engineering background along with his strong Christian faith to build a riveting storyline. For the spiritually-minded or spiritually-curious who enjoy the techno-thriller genre, Neurifact is a highly recommended read.”

Chapter 1

In the conference room was a team of Lockheed-Martin F-35C simulator engineers….

Chapter 3

Before he had turned thirty degrees, Lancer thought quickly to himself….

Chapter 12

Lancer keyed his mic on his inter-formation comm channel….

A man in green jacket looking at an airplane.

From the Cockpit to the Divine

Some fighter pilots have instincts, impulses, and intuition to perform sudden unorthodox maneuvers that strangely, lead to mission success.

In Neurifact, a neurological AI tool observes and assesses a unique brainwave phenomenon associated with one F-35C pilot's impulsive action and justifiably arrives at a spiritually based finding.

A pixel art style picture of an airplane.

Data-Starved AI Autopilot “Behaved Less Like a Fighter Pilot and More Like a Software Engineer”

When you fly a strike fighter, one instant you are wearing aviator wings, and the next instant you may be wearing angel wings.

We may need to take off our shoes. This lab may be holy ground.

An AI Autopilot has no honor and no soul. I do.

In that moment, Lancer was perhaps within a second of dying in a massive explosion and she was on his mind.

Would an omniscient God and creator leave such a perfect description of a future Christian pilot who would “pray in the spirit,” to be protected by the “shield of faith,” and “be alert” for an attack by “flaming arrows?