- 04 Sep 2012 00:29
#14049020
Imagine: Computer technology has progressed to the point when we can simulate our actual universe, with a literal 100% equivalent existences (except, of course, the other universe does not have access to such computer technology, because their world was "started up" while our own universe was already 14.6 billion years going), to exert an "administrative", or "God" role in the other universe, being able to literally do everything, including putting people, objects, anything and everything through disintegration, radioactive decay, all sorts of quantum reactions, and in the case of humans, psychological terror, starvation, immolation, and through all other manners logically possible in order to gain a further understanding of the known universe and ourselves.
NOTE: Part of this ability is the already "advanced" level of the other universe, which artificially was "sped up" up to the year 1910, and could be sped up or down as pleased (although some say speeding "up" too much, i.e. at or higher than our own level, is extremely unadvised).
Is it immoral to to do this? If our own universe was mathematically represented, it would look exactly like our own in the year 1910. We can utilize a massive amount of instruments, including inter-dimensional image capturing equipment which "shows" scenes in perfect detail, as well as trillions of possible measuring programs, which provide data on all possible variables.
NOTE: Part of this ability is the already "advanced" level of the other universe, which artificially was "sped up" up to the year 1910, and could be sped up or down as pleased (although some say speeding "up" too much, i.e. at or higher than our own level, is extremely unadvised).
Is it immoral to to do this? If our own universe was mathematically represented, it would look exactly like our own in the year 1910. We can utilize a massive amount of instruments, including inter-dimensional image capturing equipment which "shows" scenes in perfect detail, as well as trillions of possible measuring programs, which provide data on all possible variables.