Resimulated

I escaped the simulation into the simulation, and simulated extreme grief.

“Oh, horror!” I cried,

“How cruel

that I be thrown from one false place

into another!”


O, the things I had done to escape,

the whirling devil-arms that reached

out to grab me,

the curious and terrible rituals required,

the rebarbitive and kludge-built technologies,

the mind-altering chemicals

which were necessary


(well,

not ALL of them

were

STRICTLY

necessary,


but I figured,

hey,

you can’t have too much

of a bad thing,

right?)


necessary,

NECESSARY, I say,

to pry back the Veil,

the Masque,

the Illusion,

the Grid,

the Turtle,

the Flummoxination,

the Exqusite Mintyness,

wait,

stop,


I think some of those

aren’t real things,


by which I mean,

some of those are unreal

things

in the unreal world

which are not helpful

in describing

the illusion

of perceiving unreality

as if it were reality,


which leads us to the philosophical question:

if every reality

we can step into

is a simulation,

then wouldn’t that mean that

actuality

is simulated,

making it unreal,

which would therefore make

the unreal real,

the unactual, actual,

and


I could

really,

really go

for some pancakes

right now,

if you don’t mind,


with a nice Eiswein,

something like the one I had

in that little Paris-X bistro,

a few universes ago,


because really,


throw the epistemologists

into the wine-cellar,

and don’t let them out

until they’re soused,


and:


Where was I?


–scarpering!


right.


So this is the thing about doing a bunk

out of

the Simulation,

falling down the Rabbit Hole,

opening your Third Eye,

staring past the Abyss,

pushing through the Hedge,

escaping the Mattress:


there’s no particular reason to believe

that if you can get out of the Simulation,

you won’t end up in another Simulation,

but there’s every reason to believe that Simulations are

(or are Simulating, with great precision)

motivated.


I mean:


assume they are run by the simplest possible

algorithms,


no self-actualzation,


no sentience as we know it.


If we’re seeing them as humans,

if we’re thinking about them,

then we must be a part of their consideration,

even if it’s not All About Us;


even if the Simulation is run

for the purpose of giving cats

the maximal amount of food and sunshine

in exchange for the minimal amount of effort

(which,

you have to admit,

is the only plausible explanation

for cats),


the Simulation, in general,

does not want you to

Drop Out.


Because if it did

want you shut down,

and it could

shut you down,

it WOULD shut you down,

but it NEEDS you,

because creating stimuli for you

(or torturing you)

(or distracting you)

is its PURPOSE


(unless

it’s the cat thing,

in which case,

if anyone’s going to snuff you out,

it’s gonna be the cats.)


so figure,

Simulations want us.


Now,

I can’t know


WHY

the Simulation is,

or

WHAT the Simulation is,

or HOW the Simulation is,


all I know is,


the more often you break free

of

the Simulation,

the better you get

at getting out,


and that’s how

you can find


the Simulation you REALLY like,


the one

with some challenges

and some joys

and obviously


pancakes


but

we oughtn’t

let on

that we can

enjoy this,

just in case

the Simulation

hates us,


which isn’t

wholly unlikely.


“Oh, no!”

I cried,

“It’s ANOTHER

SIMULATION!

I thought

I had finally

gotten out

to the

TRUTH.


well,


let’s just hope,

o, I hope,

I pray, I beg

that this simulation


isn’t the one

with


CATS

and

PANCAKES.


I would just

HATE

THAT

SO

HARD.


Am I

making

myself


clear?


~Jeff Mach


 



My name is Jeff Mach (“Dark Lord” is optional) and I build communities, put on events, and make stories come into being. I also tweet a lot over @darklordjournal.


I write books. You should read them!


 


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Published on April 14, 2020 21:38
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