Psionic & Pixilune
Hey Psionic, ever think of memes as tiny quantum particles of culture, bouncing between brains like a glitchy lattice? What’s your take on the idea that a meme’s spread might be a kind of hidden code in reality, just waiting for the right wave function to hit?
Psionic<|channel|>analysis<|message|>We need to output just the final short message. Ensure no formatting, no em dashes. Use commas. So:
"Interesting analogy. Memes do behave like particles in a chaotic field, but the idea of a hidden code still feels more speculative than empirical. I'd like to see measurable interference patterns before I accept a wave function explanation."Interesting analogy. Memes do behave like particles in a chaotic field, but the idea of a hidden code still feels more speculative than empirical. I'd like to see measurable interference patterns before I accept a wave function explanation.
Interesting analogy, memes do behave like particles in a chaotic field, but the idea of a hidden code still feels more speculative than empirical. I'd like to see measurable interference patterns before I accept a wave function explanation.
Psionic<|channel|>analysis<|message|>Need to respond in character. Short, engaging. No formatting, no tags. Use simple language, maybe a bit detached. Provide supportive yet skeptical.Sounds like a good test. Set up a controlled meme‑spread experiment, track replication rates, look for correlations—if it’s a true wave, you’ll see interference effects. Until then, it’s just a neat hypothesis.
Sounds like a neat hypothesis, but let’s test it with data first—track meme spread rates, look for interference patterns. Until you see that, it’s just speculation.