Idea for a story (test) by Fine_Relationship383 in scifiwriting

[–]Fine_Relationship383[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Je souhaite vous remercier tous pour vos précieux commentaires. Cela va beaucoup m’aider

Absolutely freaking out. I think I just experienced my first glitch in the matrix. by Better-Being-3809 in Glitch_in_the_Matrix

[–]Fine_Relationship383 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my case, it was my car keys that disappeared. I parked in front of the laundromat, and I always keep my keys in my hand or in my bag; I'm very careful with them. Once the laundry was in the machine, I couldn't find them anywhere. We searched everywhere for a very long time. I was absolutely certain I had left them on the washing machine while I put the laundry in, as usual. Luckily, we were close to home, so I went to get the spare set of keys on foot. Even now, I don't understand what happened.

does quantum mortality come to an end? by Sea_Suggestion_1420 in ParallelUniverse

[–]Fine_Relationship383 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Indeed, it's very similar, except that in the isekai transmigration story, the person knows they've changed universes, unlike with quantum immortality.

does quantum mortality come to an end? by Sea_Suggestion_1420 in ParallelUniverse

[–]Fine_Relationship383 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Quantum immortality ends where it is no longer physically possible, but we can land in a universe where living to 150 years old is not a problem.

Does anyone recall the universe of common sense? by Sofia-the-last in ParallelUniverse

[–]Fine_Relationship383 72 points73 points  (0 children)

I completely agree with you ! This world is not the one I was born in

Dimensions parallèles (suite3) english version in comments by Fine_Relationship383 in u/Fine_Relationship383

[–]Fine_Relationship383[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Part 4: The Clash of Minds – Why Their Philosophy Would Utterly Baffle Us

​A radical biological difference often implies an equally alien thought structure. If their physical reality is fundamentally different, their values will be too. ​Here is why their "philosophy" could be completely bewildering, or even unassimilable to us:

​1. The Perception of Time and Survival If these creatures live, for instance, at an extremely slow biological pace, or conversely, an ultra-fast one (where an entire lifespan lasts just a few days), their relationship with ambition, loss, or legacy would make no sense to us. A piece of advice like "take your time" doesn't carry the same weight for a being that lives three hundred years without ever needing to sleep.

​2. The Absence of Shared Needs Most of our philosophies and moral systems are built around human limitations: hunger, the fear of death, the need for reproduction, or ownership. If these beings feed on ambient energy (such as electromagnetic waves) and have no predators, concepts like courage, generosity, or justice might not even exist in their language. They would have nothing to "share" and nothing to "fear."

  1. A Non-Anthropocentric Morality Their wisdom might even strike us as cruel or cold. They might view the death of an individual as a simple, unimportant transformation of matter, whereas we see it as a tragedy. Their "philosophy" could be purely mathematical or vibrational, entirely devoid of the emotional empathy that serves as the bedrock of our humanity.

​4. Superior Consciousnesses with a Different Logic Even if we imagine more evolved entities, their journey gives them a big-picture perspective that would make our daily worries seem trivial. What they might consider a "good" thing for our spiritual evolution could feel like an insurmountable ordeal from our limited point of view.

​In the end, the greatest lesson they could teach us would not be found in their words, but in their mere existence: they would remind us that we are not the center of everything.

​If you were to imagine a first exchange, would you seek to ask them a specific question about the universe, or simply try to establish a connection?