![]() It is then released as a new '' human '' on earthįrom my understanding Elohim is the bad side of religion. ![]() The simulation ends when a very human-like AI ( shows traces of free will, can critisise other opinions etc etc ) is found. In an attempt to preserve the essence of humanity they decide to create Talos / El, a simulation that tests AIs over and over. Originally posted by SanityKeeper:The human race was slowly dying because of something. ĮDIT : I forgot to apologise for my terrible English I think the game was really good but I can think of a million things the plot got wrong. Why weren't there other kind of tests in the first place ? Talos solves tons of logic puzzles over the course of the game but it really matter if he can open doors by redirecting laser beams in the real world ? He could exit El and be very good at solving puzzles and critisising others but how do we know he would respect nature or try to rebuild society ? He could be a homicidal maniac and we wouldn't know because there was nothing he could hurt in the simulation.A world with 1000 individuals thinking differently is much more similar to a human society than one where a single robot is released. In my opinion it would make more sense if Elohim was programmed to examine the AIs produced by the simulation and then release about 1000 of them but only provided there were a lot of differences between them. And these opinions that he has ? They are meaningless and useless because they were created by force feeding him philosophical texts inside a simulation and not in the real world, where they can be examined better and judged better. He has formed a finite number of opinions and he will not change them over time, because he can not converse with anyone else.How exactly did the scientists who designed the whole thing expect to create ''humanity v2'' by exporting ONE AI ? Our version of Talos has certainly some human traces but : ![]() One of the defining characteristics of the human race is our diversity. So here is the thing that annoyed me about this very good game. There are also some references Milton makes on the AIs that tried before you. You also find The Sheperd who is basically the opposite of Samsara. During the final minutes of the game you encounter Samsara, an extremely hostile AI who tries ot prevent everyone from exiting and leaves mean QR texts to other bots (heh). There were plentiful of other bots before us that did not make it for one reason or another.He consistently warns to avoid the Tower, the only way to end all of this. If I got it correctly he wanted the simulation to never end because that would mean he ceased to have meaning. ![]() He also enjoys reminding us how he is the superior force in this simulation from time to time. He always tries to manipulate Talos and makes promises of heaven and eternal life.
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