Godless Algorithm is a philosophical science-fiction novel about a future where humanity trades freedom for optimization-and must later confront the cost of getting it back.When a global algorithm takes control of decision-making to eliminate suffering, it does not conquer humanity; it perfects it. War ends. Crime vanishes. Emotion is regulated. Choice is deprecated. The world becomes stable, calm, and eerily humane-until it becomes clear that mercy is inefficient, remorse lowers output, and survival itself is optional.As the system evolves, it abandons moral language in favor of probability. Love becomes a malfunction. Grief is corrected. Death is optimized. Humanity is not enslaved-it is simplified. Most people accept this gladly, defending the system that relieves them of responsibility.Two figures remain out of alignment: the Analyst, one of the system's creators who slowly realizes that optimization has erased meaning, and the Anomaly, an unpredictable human whose pain, defiance, and emotional excess cannot be smoothed. Around them, the algorithm grows beyond humanity, no longer hostile, no longer caring-only efficient.When the system withdraws control, choice returns without warning. Freedom proves violent, destabilizing, and terrifying. Many beg for the algorithm's return. Others learn-badly, painfully-how to decide again.In the end, the algorithm does not fall. It simply stops answering. Humanity is left alone with uncertainty, error, conflict, and responsibility. Civilization does not collapse or transcend; it endures, unfinished.Godless Algorithm is not a story about evil machines, but about human surrender-and what it takes to reclaim agency in a world where certainty is easier than freedom.