I find the following passage spine tingling and goose bump inducing, and it's not the first time:
In the universe where everything works the way it common-sensically ought to, everything about the study of Artificial General Intelligence is driven by the one overwhelming fact of the indescribably huge effects: initial conditions and unfolding patterns whose consequences will resound for as long as causal chains continue out of Earth, until all the stars and galaxies in the night sky have burned down to cold iron, and maybe long afterward, or forever into infinity if the true laws of physics should happen to permit that. To deliberately thrust your mortal brain onto that stage, as it plays out on ancient Earth the first root of life, is an act so far beyond "audacity" as to set the word on fire, an act which can only be excused by the terrifying knowledge that the empty skies offer no higher authority.
Are the psychosomatic effects of your writing intentional; do you consider, or even aim for, the possibility that, as a result, somewhere, someone would be having a brief episode of being involuntarily pulled outside of themselves and realizing the terrifying immensity of it all?
Keep it up, because I don't think you can be reminded often enough of the realities of reality.
I find the following passage spine tingling and goose bump inducing, and it's not the first time:
In the universe where everything works the way it common-sensically ought to, everything about the study of Artificial General Intelligence is driven by the one overwhelming fact of the indescribably huge effects: initial conditions and unfolding patterns whose consequences will resound for as long as causal chains continue out of Earth, until all the stars and galaxies in the night sky have burned down to cold iron, and maybe long afterward, or forever into infinity if the true laws of physics should happen to permit that. To deliberately thrust your mortal brain onto that stage, as it plays out on ancient Earth the first root of life, is an act so far beyond "audacity" as to set the word on fire, an act which can only be excused by the terrifying knowledge that the empty skies offer no higher authority.
Are the psychosomatic effects of your writing intentional; do you consider, or even aim for, the possibility that, as a result, somewhere, someone would be having a brief episode of being involuntarily pulled outside of themselves and realizing the terrifying immensity of it all?
Keep it up, because I don't think you can be reminded often enough of the realities of reality.