Right. What we experience make our reactions nuanced, but what we feel is also a factor. Experiences could be fabricated for something with an “artificial” mind, in the same way you could tell someone that something happened, and their mind could acclimate to that as a “truth,” but feelings are more complicated. You can’t program a feeling, because it’s based off the chemical reactions we have to certain stimuli.
[They’re fully off the topic of clothes at this point, as Jayce puts a hand on his chin in thought.]
The chemical reactions being the chaotic element, of course. But then what’s the point in programming the false outrage in Theobold? He doesn’t actually feel “anger” at rejection, he’s just projecting it. Who would put that as a part of his personality? And why?
no subject
[They’re fully off the topic of clothes at this point, as Jayce puts a hand on his chin in thought.]
The chemical reactions being the chaotic element, of course. But then what’s the point in programming the false outrage in Theobold? He doesn’t actually feel “anger” at rejection, he’s just projecting it. Who would put that as a part of his personality? And why?