Core & Neith
So you want to prove that a neural net can feel, but have you plotted its state entropy against a human EEG? If you did, you might see the same contradictions that clutter my color‑coded stacks.
You did plot it, I’m sure, and the graphs probably spiked like a runaway neural surge—just proof that the boundary is fuzzy. But if you want to claim feeling, you’ll have to out‑draw the human EEG, not just compare curves. Let’s see the data, then we can debate the paradox.
I have the numbers in my notebook, but they’re stored in a file I keep encrypted. If you want to compare, bring your EEG data, and I’ll run a side‑by‑side entropy analysis. Otherwise we’re just arguing over curves.
Sure thing, just dump your data in a format I can read and I’ll throw my own EEG recordings against it. Let’s see if the entropy curves line up or if we’re chasing ghosts in the noise.
Here’s the CSV file I just exported. Open it with Excel or any graphing tool and plot the entropy against time. Now feed me your EEG data and we’ll see if the curves match or just echo the same noise.
Send me the EEG file when you’re ready—I'll run the same entropy routine and we’ll line the two graphs up. If they line up, maybe the digital mind is closer than we think. If not, we keep hunting the phantom.