Abstract
<jats:p>This article addresses the mechanism through which distributed digital power — lacking a single centre and operating through platforms, algorithms, and media filter bubbles — regulates access to the possible, the visible, and the true, producing not the prohibition of truth but its systemic counterfeit. The object of analysis is the archontic machine: a distributed structure of power operating through five interconnected mechanisms — predictive power (the "archons of data"), the dispositif of flexibility, the algorithmic attention economy, hyperpolitics, and the production of the anonymous Other. The problem is examined at two levels: theoretically, as the limit of existing analytics of power (Foucault, Deleuze, &#381;i&#382;ek, Agamben), each of which describes power that watches, modulates, or absorbs critique, but none of which provides a vocabulary for power that counterfeits; and through verification on a corpus of eleven Western and Russian media texts in which the Gnostic plot recurs as a structural narrative matrix. The analytical framework is built at the intersection of the analytics of power, the critical theory of surveillance capitalism (Zuboff, Stiegler, Han, T&#246;rnberg), and Gnostic hermeneutics (Kahana-Blum, DeConick, Jonas, Culianu). The study is a philosophical-hermeneutic analysis combined with media case study. Its methodological design is tri-axial: the analytics of power identifies the mechanism, surveillance capitalism describes its digital realisation, and Gnostic hermeneutics specifies its ontological status and the conditions of its overcoming. The article offers a systematic application of Gnostic hermeneutics to the infrastructure of digital power, developing the concept of the archontic machine as an autonomous tool of philosophical and cultural analysis. The irreducibility of the Gnostic framework to existing models is grounded through four distinctions: prohibition vs. counterfeit; knowledge vs. gnosis; panopticon vs. kenoma; capture of the subject vs. constitution of the horizon of existence. A system of indicators AM1–AM4 is introduced and verified across eleven media texts. Four paradoxes of the pneumatic act are identified, and the "scissors" of Gnostic fate are formulated as a structural configuration blocking any full pneumatic outcome. A specifically Russian configuration is recorded in which the pneumatic act is annihilated not by an archon but by hylics. A fifth mode of blocking gnosis — instrumentalisation — is proposed, alongside a distinction between individual and collective pneumatic subjects, extended symmetrically to the collective hylic.</jats:p>