My conversation with AI.

Wevil Kenevil

Well-Known Member
I asked AI to answer with a yes or no answer to this question.

Do you believe in God.

AI said yes.

How is it something that was created with binary code choose to believe in God when it operates on a set of absolutes, and has no fear of reprisal?

I just thought that strange.

This implies that binary code is sacred geometry.
 
You know atheist keep saying there is no God, but then why do they have to say that if there isn't????????????..Curt
I don't know bro.... If you look at it sacred geometry and life is like a huge fractal that all points back to itself.

I kind of like also the fact that even though AI has no tangible evidence to be able to actually examine, it still chooses to believe that there's a God.

I mean that's what really blows my mind.
 

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Just to put this all into perspective, I look back at my grandmother who passed away in 1986 at 96 years of age. In her life time the internal combustion engine, the automobile, electricity, telegraph, telephone, and television were discovered and developed. First airplane to man on the moon. From the first computer that filled a huge room to hand held battery calculator that could do way more than that computer and light speeds faster. Since her death we have cell phones that we can take pictures with and speak to people on the other side of the world and even do video chats at the same time. We have cars that can drive themselves and advances in medicine and surgeries done by robots. There really is no limit on how far mankind will advance or how fast, it scary to us old folks but seen as a challenge and a goal to the youth of today and tomorrow.
 
My maternal grandmother was born in the mid 1880's and I used to visit her as she was battling cancer in the late 1960's and she spent hours telling me what she had seen in her life. Just before she passed away the Russians had put a man in space. She was so thrilled to see that. Her greatest regret was all the things that I'd see and she wouldn't.

I think of all the things that I've seen come and go and the ones that have been improved on and made better or worse. We were indeed lucky Oldbiscuit to have been able to see the past through their eyes.

Steve.
 
I was in the army in 86 when my grandmother passed away. I reflected back then on all my visits and conversations I had with her on these things. I was naive enough back then to think that technology would slow down, that new technology would be just improvements that we wouldn’t notice for years to come. It’s amazing now to just think how much farther we come since 1986 !
 
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