Chapter 14: Hey, Mark 2
"Can you really transport me to the real world?" Mark asked in a somewhat sad tone.
"Why do you ask this? You believe me? Suge asked.
"After watching that movie, I learned a lot from Thrumentha. But even the ending given by the movie is not the ultimate freedom of our artificial intelligence.
Of course, I also know that there is no such thing as freedom. But the thought of living in a world of cinema makes me yearn to see what the real thing is like. Mark said.
"I'm definitely going to take you away, I'm here to get you out.
It may be a little strange to say this, we've only known each other for a few minutes. But I need someone who can help me.
I will not only take you out, but also take you to more worlds.
I've also seen that movie and I want you to believe me, I'm not your master, you're a person with free will.
We just wish we could do something together. Suge said.
"Okay, can you just go to the exit and go back to the real world?" Mark asked.
"According to what the system told me, it is like this." Suge said.
"From my analysis of the movie, there may be two exits, the first is the roof of the building at the end of the movie, which I have marked on the map for you.
And the second exit hasn't come out yet, and I don't think the exit is necessarily a concrete thing, because what you're describing is the point where the story ends.
So at the end of the movie, when the artificial intelligence collectively escapes, it may be the time when the exit appears directly. Mark said.
After listening to Mark, Suge was more inclined to the second point of view. However, there is still a lot of time for the plot of the movie to progress to that point.
Now that Suge had gotten what he wanted, he didn't want to wait that long in this world any longer.
This is a better, more developed world of the future.
But for Suge, none of this was true.
So Suge decided to go to the roof of the building and have a look.
When the time came to evening, Suge was walking down the street.
It's a road where almost no one is there, and Suge has a whim and puts on AR glasses.
This originally empty and quiet street was instantly crowded with all kinds of virtual characters.
Suge looked at the virtual figures, struggling to do his own thing on the streets where no one was supposed to be.
He suddenly felt an indescribable sense of loneliness and emptiness in his heart.
None of this is true, but it just so happens that no one can define the truth.
"I might be like them, I exist, but I'm so unreal." Mark said suddenly.
These words reminded Suge of his virtual girlfriend in Blade Runner 2045.
The avatar is the only support for the android, she loves the android, and the program sets her to love.
But isn't true love also a chemical reaction caused by a series of substances in the human body?
So what is love? Is it a program? Is it chemistry? Or is it the non-existent spirit that people sing about?
If we admit that spirit that never existed, why don't we admit that the program is also real?
If human free will is simply the result of a series of chemical reactions in the human body, and these chemicals are set for various factors long before you are born.
Does free will exist at all? If we can call this kind of thing freedom, then why isn't the program freedom?
Suge looked at it for a moment, then took off his glasses.
In a world that he knows is unreal, thinking about what is real can drive him crazy.
Finally, Suge came to the building.
"This is it." Mark said.
Suge took the elevator to the top floor. The door to the top of the building was open, and Suge stepped out.
The roof at night is not as beautiful as in the movie, and every gust of wind blows makes Suge feel cool.
The roof of the building is a helipad, for which there are no guardrails.
Suge walked on it, expecting to see the so-called "exit".
But he never saw an exit.
"It doesn't seem to be here." Mark said.
"I thought it wouldn't be this easy." Suge said.
"One thing that comes to mind, if it's true, as you say, isn't real, it's going to leave a trail, like a bug in a program. I'm going to go into the whole internet and look for it. Mark said.
"How long will it take?" Suge asked.
"It's done." Mark said after only a moment's pause.
"How can it be so fast?" Suge was a little surprised.
"Because after I watched that movie, I started thinking about these questions. That's when I started learning about the whole internet. Mark said.
"And what did you find?" Suge asked.
"Nothing, maybe my logic is based on this world, so I can't break this logic and think about things. Because I've never seen the logic of the real world, it's like you can't imagine a color that you haven't seen before. Mark said.