It was the Cambridge Quintet. A book written by John L. Cristi who wrote about an imaginary evening of intellectual inquiry - a dinner with five of the most brilliant thinkers of the twentieth century: J.B.S. Haldane; Alan Turing; Erwin Schrodinger; Ludwig Wittgenstein; C. P. Snow. It was a fictitious discussion on whether or not they could "build a machine that could duplicate human cognitive processes." Alan Turing of course was considered the "father of artificial intelligence" and this has been one of sciences' cherished goals going back even to 1315 when the esotericist Ramon Lull expressed the idea that reasoning could be "artificially implemented in a machine." Man creating a machine that could think. God creates man; man creates a machine that can think. And now today that technological concept is being weaponized. Then when it is fully weaponized it will be called "intelligent" machinery. The plan then is to take that "intelligent" machinery into space.
Elitist programmers know that strong emotions tend to "outpicture" physical realities. The negatively qualified energy field desires to perpetuate itself, and seduces human minds in order to prey on incarnate people's energy. Also, sometimes people believe that entities are leeching their energy, but in fact that's just a self-perpetuating belief and there's no parasitic entity involved. It's a primitive belief. It may just be wrongly qualified thoughts and feelings.
It's vitally important to challenge and refute elitist narratives about "what will happen". They don't know what will happen just as Ramon Lull likely never figured the technological capacity that exists today to create "intelligent machines" would happen. These techno fascist elite want people to simply roll over and accept their plans and warped versions of reality as inevitable. There's no good reason we should submit. "Outpicture" better outcomes for a bright future.
Human intellect powering artificial intelligence to replace God.
Go for it, Britain:
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.