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Confusion / muddled reasoning. I felt your submission has a bit too much confusion or muddled thinking to approve. Reasons I check the box for this feedback item include things like “really strange premises that aren’t justified”, “inferences that don’t seem to follow from the premises,” “use of weird categories,” “failure to understand basics topics of what it discusses (e.g. completely misunderstand how LLMs work)”, and/or “failure to respond to basic arguments about the topic”. Often the right thing to do in this case is read more about the topic you’re discussing.
Sorry, LessWrong has a particularly high bar for content from new users and this didn't quite make the cut. (We have a somewhat higher bar for approving a user's first post or comment)
I have created the idea that every person has a kind of time fuse somewhere in their head or mind. In my opinion, it is through this fuse, life appears to be a relatively long period of time. Without this fuse, or in the event of its eventual failure, existence will be just a blink of an eye, and any plans for the future will make no sense. Such a state would lead humanity into a kind of psychosis, which would eventually end in self-destruction. There is a chance that in the future, scientists will be able to find this time fuse in the brain and will be able to modify it. In this way, man will be able to live forever...
The time fuse is also influenced by external factors or individual psychological states, so that people in physical pain or depression live longer than those who are happy, because time for the person in pain flows more slowly in his/her subjective perception.
My thesis here is that 80 years of happiness are shorter than 80 years of physical pain or depression. Thus, people in pain live longer than those who are happy.
I provide a diagram of this "Time Fuse" concept below: