Try living in a picture of a house for a week, and get back to us. — unenlightened
What I mean by this is that we draw a false distinction between that of real and fake. The matrix did exist, as a server in a computer. The matrix's computer existed in the physical world, and by proxy, the matrix itself existed in the physical world. The term "fake" is misleading because everything exists in a sense. Any thought you have exists as neurons in your brain. If we live in a simulation, it would also be the real world, because the simulation exists in the real world. — Hyper
Circular reasoning & compositional fallacy.If we live in a simulation, it would also be the real world, because the simulation exists in the real world. — Hyper
So how do you designate the distinction between a copy / counterfeit and the original? or distinguish a fictional account from a nonfictional account?The term "fake" is misleading because everything exists in a sense.
:lol:Try living in a picture of a house for a week, and get back to us.
— unenlightened
Yo mamma was so fat, her picture weighed 10 pounds. — T Clark
Things that aren't real aren't meaningfully different than things that are real.
What I mean by this is that we draw a false distinction between that of real and fake. — Hyper
The term "fake" is misleading because everything exists in a sense. — Hyper
If we live in a simulation, it would also be the real world, because the simulation exists in the real world. — Hyper
My understanding of those lines is that, the moment you try to speak of or name the Tao, you have automatically failed. Because words are limited, and limiting, while the Tao is infinite. Any attempt to use words to describe the Tao is an attempt to limit it. Which is impossible, so you cannot be talking about the Tao.The first verse of the Tao Te Ching, one of the founding texts, says "The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao. The name that can be named is not the eternal name." My understanding of the meaning of those lines is that things don't really become "real" until we name, conceptualize, them. — T Clark
My understanding of those lines is that, the moment you try to speak of or name the Tao, you have automatically failed. Because words are limited, and limiting, while the Tao is infinite. Any attempt to use words to describe the Tao is an attempt to limit it. Which is impossible, so you cannot be talking about the Tao. — Patterner
No. Just different focus.I don’t see that your understanding contradicts mine. — T Clark
I think living in the Matrix would be just as real as living in the real world. — Patterner
But I wouldn't want to be rewritten. Trinity, Neo, Morpheus, and all the rest were themselves whether in the Matrix or out.You're on the way... — Leontiskos
But I wouldn't want to be rewritten. Trinity, Neo, Morpheus, and all the rest were themselves whether in the Matrix or out. — Patterner
If you were a sadist in the Matrix, you wouldn't be a saint when you unplugged, or vice versa. — Patterner
No. Nearly 99% off all test subjects accepted the program as long as they were given a choice. Even if they were only aware of the choice at a near unconscious level.But Cypher is the only one who agrees with you. — Leontiskos
He and I diverge at that point.He wants to be rewritten to forget about the real world (and also his betrayal). — Leontiskos
The others don't need a rewrite. They go back and forth, themselves in either setting. And their decisions are real in either setting.One must choose before they know the difference between the Matrix and the real world, and that is why Cypher needs his rewrite. — Leontiskos
That's likely. I suspect human consciousness/mind is the way it is because of the environment inn which it came to be. Consciousness/mind that came to be in an entirely different environment would be entirely different. And I doubt consciousness/mind of one environment could go back-and-forth between entirely different environments, and remain the same. It possibly could not go back-and-forth at all.If you were a sadist in the Matrix, you wouldn't be a saint when you unplugged, or vice versa.
— Patterner
Maybe. The Matrix is a simulation, so it really depends on how accurate the simulation is. — Leontiskos
The others don't need a rewrite. They go back and forth, themselves in either setting. And their decisions are real in either setting. — Patterner
And I doubt consciousness/mind of one environment could go back-and-forth between entirely different environments, and remain the same. It possibly could not go back-and-forth at all. — Patterner
Cypher, presumably, thought there was no possibility of surviving other than the path he chose. But he could not live with the guilt of that choice, so wanted to be rewritten. That's incomprehensible to me. Being rewritten, giving up your consciousness/mind/self, is as good as death. The last moments before being rewritten couldn't feel any different than the last moments before the blade of the guillotine hits. — Patterner
I really don't understand what you're saying. I'm saying those inside the Matrix are having real experiences, are facing real choices, and are making real decisions. Just because it's not the setting our species evolved in, and naturally lives in, doesn't mean they don't act in accordance with their values, fears, and desires, or that their choices don't have consequences.The fact that they refuse a rewrite and Cypher desires it just shows that the experience of the one who takes a blue pill is different from the experience of the one who takes the red pill (even within the Matrix). And yet you seem to say that there is no difference. — Leontiskos
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