You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: The Creation and AI

in WORLD OF XPILAR18 hours ago

Greetings, friend.
The evolution of AI toward models less dependent on humans is definitely a topic discussed a lot on the internet. It strikes me that new models are changing the analysis structure and are becoming less dependent on accumulated data and are interacting directly with the user, becoming their assistants (apprentices?). They will ask you questions to "get to know you better." Here I laugh with some fear, remembering the wolf in Little Red Riding Hood.

Changing the subject, I liked what I read. I love fiction literature, and the topic you present is very rich. I think the core of your idea is brilliant. But the description reminded me little of The Lord of the Rings. I found more similarities with the sagas: "Dune" by F. Herbert, and "Foundation" by I. Asimov. Also, to the "Prometheus" film series (when you say that life already existed on planets before the arrival of spaceships).

I invite you to continue exploring this idea and maintain the omnipresence of AI. I see an interesting vein here: "the universe and the creator are one." I wonder how it came to exist? Did that "creator" have a "designer"? I would gladly read a series of novels or stories prior to the existence of the universe you're presenting.

Thanks for this post; it connected me with the essence of Steemit.

I invite you to stay tuned, as our friend @dove11 will launch a series of fiction literature challenges for six weeks.

https://steemit.com/challengepitch/@dove11/application-for-steemit-challenge-season-26-or-or-fiction-writing-or-or


💦💥2️⃣0️⃣2️⃣5️⃣ This is a manual curation from the @tipu Curation Project

@tipu curate

Sort:  
 7 hours ago (edited)

Yes, I just mentioned The Lord of The Rings because it is a saga, only this one would encompass such a longer period of time. Don't worry, I will not delve into this, like Kurt Vonnegut's Kilgore Trout, I sometimes have good ideas, but my writing is terrible.
"“Jesus—if Kilgore Trout could only write!” Rosewater exclaimed. He had a point: Kilgore Trout’s unpopularity was deserved. His prose was frightful. Only his ideas were good."