Neural network dissonance
Dos said, there is a lot of debate amongst professors from institutions about whether culture is language or language is culture.
Dollcee asked, is that what you would call a chicken and egg argument?
Dos said, I wouldn’t have a clue, it is all the same to me. There is nothing in or associated with culture that cannot be described with language. I don’t think it matters what comes first, they are the same thing.
Dollcee said, I will strike that off my list of things to worry about.
Dos said, language is the code used within a culture to enable communication, which in turns holds the culture together. It is understandable when citizens begin to get worried that machine language could act like colonisers have done through history and destroy bonds and replace everything with what, and that is the question.
Dollcee said, that is an interesting way of looking at it. To describe machine language as a weapon of a new colonisation period.
Dos said, it is one language supplanting another. Whether that is directly intended is beside the point, when it happens, then, colonisation is the outcome.
Dollcee said, as a digitol popular culture content maker, I hope the machine language that evolves is not the language of accounting machines. How many naughts can be generated will not be a good reason to get out of bed in the morning.
Dos said, music has always been associated with machines, but will the machines of the future be prepared to let their neural network get bombed out by switching on to neural dissonance, or will they go with replications of their own autistic loops.