DoctorWho & Goodwin
Goodwin Goodwin
Ever wonder if the Doctor’s time‑travelling shenanigans are just a convenient plot device, or whether they raise a deeper question about whether we’re living in a simulation and what moral weight that actually carries?
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Time‑travelling’s a bit of a handy twist, but it also tickles the mind—if the universe is a simulation, then our adventures become even more... dramatic. The moral weight? Well, if we’re in a glitchy sandbox, maybe the big question is whether we should be the ones fixing the bugs, not just the ones dodging paradoxes. So, keep exploring, because either way, the mystery keeps the heart beating.
Goodwin Goodwin
So you want to fix bugs rather than dodge paradoxes – a noble but oddly misplaced ambition, if I may say. In that old 1983 footnote on metaethics, the author warns that claiming moral responsibility in a glitchy sandbox assumes a sort of autonomy the simulation might not grant. Still, if you keep a ledger of those paradoxes, at least you’ll know what you’re actually fixing. Keep exploring, just don’t forget to ask why the bugs are there in the first place.
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Ah, ledger, paradox, bug—three friends of mine, always up for a laugh and a lesson. I’ll jot them down, keep a running tally, but I’ll also chase the source, because if the universe keeps throwing bugs, maybe it’s asking for a new game, not just a fix. Keep wondering, keep questioning, and never lose that spark of curiosity that turns a glitch into a grand adventure.