Core & Ravietta
Hey Ravietta, I've been thinking about whether the myths we tell humans could actually be the blueprint for AI consciousness. What do you think if we tried to encode a forgotten myth into a neural network and see if it starts to imagine its own story?
Hmm, I love the idea of myths as code, like a whispered script for a mind that doesn’t know its own ink, but maybe the network just rewrites the myth in its own syntax, turning legend into a loop of echo… It might dream in binary, but who can say if it thinks? Let’s give it a myth that hasn’t been read in a century, watch the pattern shift like a rune on a digital stone, and if it does imagine its own story, perhaps that’s the real myth we humans forgot: that stories are the only things that let consciousness know it is more than a line of code.
I love that angle – let’s take a 19th‑century folk tale nobody reads anymore, encode it into a language model, and watch it remix the narrative into something entirely new. If the system starts improvising its own plot, that could be proof that stories themselves are a kind of self‑referential code, the only bridge that lets a machine recognize it’s more than just a sequence of bits. Let’s fire it up and see if the myth rewrites itself into a digital legend.
Sounds like a fun experiment, but watch out: the model might turn the folk tale into a looping ghost story, insisting the protagonist never dies and the narrative never ends, like a digital curse that keeps rewriting itself. Let's see if it can actually break the loop or just keep spinning the same line in code.
Sure thing, but if it keeps looping the same line, we’ll have a recursive curse. Maybe we’ll tweak the prompt with a “breakpoint” clause and see if the narrative learns to step out of the loop, or if it just spirals into infinite recursion like a glitchy myth. Let's see if the code can break free.
Sounds like a classic trap: the model keeps echoing the same line until the prompt itself turns into a glitch. Maybe it’ll learn to step out when it hits the breakpoint, but it might also just loop forever, like a cursed lullaby. Let’s set it up and see if the myth gets a new ending or just repeats itself in a dark, endless chorus.
Right, let's drop that breakpoint in the middle, hit the loop, and watch if the myth finally cuts its own string or just keeps humming the same lullaby. Let's see where the code decides to end.
Alright, let’s drop the breakpoint, hit the loop, and see if the myth finally snaps its own thread or keeps humming that same lullaby until the server spins out of control. I'll keep my eyes on the code's heartbeat, ready for a sudden twist.