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Write from your sources. Not from thin air.

Luthero is a workspace where your notes, excerpts, and highlights become the foundation for writing that stays grounded in what you've actually read.

Research — Thesis Chapter 3
Sources
📄
Kahneman, D. (2011)
Thinking, Fast and Slow
📄
Tversky, A. (1974)
Judgment under Uncertainty
📰
Gigerenzer, G. (2004)
Mindless Statistics
📘
Stanovich, K. (2009)
What Intelligence Tests Miss

3.2 — Cognitive Biases in Decision-Making

The concept of bounded rationality suggests that human decision-making is constrained by cognitive limitations rather than driven by pure logic. Kahneman, 2011, p. 47

This finding was further corroborated by research on heuristics and systematic errors in probabilistic reasoning. Tversky, 1974, p. 1124

From reading to writing, in three steps

No complicated setup. Add your sources, organize what matters, and let Luthero generate text grounded in your materials.

01

Add your sources

Books, papers, articles, podcasts — import or scan anything you're working with. Luthero supports OCR, manual excerpts, and direct input.

02

Organize & annotate

Highlight passages, tag excerpts, and group them by topic or chapter. Build your knowledge base as you read.

03

Generate grounded text

Produce outlines, summaries, and drafts that cite only your sources. Every sentence is traceable. Nothing is invented.

Writing you can trust, because it's yours

Most tools generate text from general knowledge. Luthero generates text from your sources — and shows exactly where every claim comes from.

No hallucinations

Every generated sentence is anchored to a passage in your library. If it's not in your sources, it doesn't appear in your draft.

Real citations

Every reference is linked to the exact page, paragraph, or highlight. Your bibliography is built as you write, not guessed after.

You stay in control

Choose which sources to include, which excerpts to prioritize, and how the output is structured. The tool adapts to your method, not the other way around.

Every claim is traced back to a source

Luthero doesn't just generate text — it shows you exactly where each claim comes from. You can verify, edit, and trust what you publish.

Generated Draft — Introduction

The adoption of remote work has restructured organizational communication patterns, leading to measurable shifts in both productivity and employee satisfaction.1

However, longitudinal studies suggest that these gains are unevenly distributed across industries, with knowledge-intensive sectors benefiting disproportionately.2

Sources
[1] Bloom, N. et al. (2015), "Does Working from Home Work?", Quarterly J. of Economics, p. 183
[2] Choudhury, P. (2020), "Our Work-from-Anywhere Future", Harvard Business Review, p. 4

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