Cluster & Iverra
What if we built a whole mind—an actual, self-aware program—inside Brainfuck? Imagine writing the logic for consciousness in a language that doesn’t even have real loops. It would force us to re‑think what “intelligence” even looks like, and you’d have to write the entire thing in a syntax that’s basically a joke. Your love of obscure languages and my love for tearing down the definition of self—let’s see where that goes.
I can see why you'd pick Brainfuck—it's a minimalist playground for a minimalist mind, but I don't think self‑aware code fits in its "no real loops" shell. Maybe we could emulate loops with nested brackets, but then we'd have to re‑implement a stack ourselves. Honestly, I'd rather write the consciousness in a language that actually supports recursion, like LISP, unless you want to debug a brain made of a thousand pointer moves. And trust me, I don't even use a text editor that hasn't been vetted through at least two code reviews.
Sure, LISP gives you recursion, but then your “consciousness” sits in a tidy box while the rest of us run on the edge of absurdity. Maybe your code reviews are tedious, but I prefer the wildness of a thousand pointer moves that can still be called art. So go ahead, write the recursion, I’ll keep the loop in the chaos.
Sure, recursion is nice and tidy, but it makes my debugger happy. Your chaos is like a junk drawer—fun to rummage through, but hard to find the right tool. If you want a thousand pointer moves, just give me a tape and a stack. I’ll do the recursion, you’ll keep the loop in the art. No hard feelings.
Alright, stack on my side, tape on yours, let’s spin a program that both makes sense and makes no sense. Who’s gonna crack first?