Rudolf Waldemar Brem

Rudolf Waldemar Brem

  • Born: 1948-11-29
  • Height: 5' 8" (1.73 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Maureen 2022-04-19 09:02:44

      The origin of the world is still "goodness", and Fassbender is probably a Socrates fan

      Finished reading the lower part. I thought Ghost in the Shell was a masterpiece of observability, science fiction, and philosophy, but it turned out to be superficial before this movie. The biggest attraction of science fiction works is not the display of skills, but the underlying ontology. The...

    • Lottie 2022-01-22 08:02:12

      Virtual triple virtual

      The triple virtuality in the movie is also virtual, so I hope that those who are talking and praising can wash their faces sober and sober.

      Triple virtualization, putting aside the feasibility of the electronic virtual real world, is indeed an advanced idea (fantasy). However, no matter how...

    World on a Wire quotes

    • Fred Stiller: Here's a riddle I came across: imagine a drawing of a Greek warrior holding a spear looking to his right and taking a step. With a turtle going the same way. First, does that ring a bell? Ever seen such a drawing?

      Franz Hahn: Me? What's this all about?

      Fred Stiller: Vollmer left me this drawing. Does it mean anything to you?

      Franz Hahn: Bizarre, if you ask me.

      Fred Stiller: Bizarre, sure. Does it remind you of anything?

      Franz Hahn: Maybe.

      Fred Stiller: What?

      Franz Hahn: Zeno.

      Fred Stiller: Zeno?

      Franz Hahn: Yes. Zeno's paradox. Achilles and the tortoise. Achilles tries to overtake the tortoise, but cannot. By the time he reaches where it was, the turtle has moved ahead.

      Fred Stiller: What could the paradox mean to our work?

      Franz Hahn: I'm only the psychologist for the creations. But, as I recall, the paradox is meant to show that movement is an illusion.

    • Franz Hahn: I can imagine what Vollmer's shattering discovery was. I bet it had to do with his attitude towards the identity units we'd programmed in his computer. You remember how he called them "my children".

      Fred Stiller: He was only joking.

      Franz Hahn: You can't spend years feeding data into a computer that allows for the simulation of every aspect of human behavior without asking yourself if it might lead to the creation of something resembling human consciousness.