ENTER THE PLEASURE CUBE

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BritMonkey

BritMonkey

2 жыл бұрын

Is it heaven on earth or a hell of your own making?
Follow me: / _britmonkey
Patreon: / britmonkey
Merch (US): crowdmade.com/collections/bri...
MUSIC: pastebin.com/DEZH7jLQ
SOURCES: pastebin.com/Kc19N5ub

Пікірлер: 2 100
@RS-25.funnybunnypvz
@RS-25.funnybunnypvz 2 жыл бұрын
its the irl equivalent to going in creative and giving yourself full enchanted diamond amor and stacks of enchanted apples
@canon-de-75
@canon-de-75 2 жыл бұрын
ikr, would do that as a kid and kill a bunch of mobs but then get bored. Later when I got older you felt much better if you had full enchanted diamond armor and stacks of enchanted apples *because* you worked hard for it over weeks of playing beforehand makes going on a mob killing rampage feel much better- ha ha die stupid zombie! take that skeleton, payback for killing me in the mine earlier making me drop my first diamonds into the lava!
@officersoulknight6321
@officersoulknight6321 2 жыл бұрын
It sounds cheesy, but it's actually an amazing way to explain this. When you do that, sure, scientifically you get the same benefits as if you got it in survival. You can easily kill mobs and do whatever you want. But you didn't *work* for that diamond armor. You didn't go through dungeons after dungeons to get those gapples. Instead of climbing the epic mountain, you teleported straight to the top.
@rewindcat7927
@rewindcat7927 2 жыл бұрын
Great observation!
@burgrz_tasty1237
@burgrz_tasty1237 2 жыл бұрын
No more achievements, you are a genius
@TheThetombraider123
@TheThetombraider123 2 жыл бұрын
yes please
@asdasdasd9320
@asdasdasd9320 2 жыл бұрын
"There is no god in a Minecraft church." Yo that actually hits deep
@soviet-doge
@soviet-doge 2 жыл бұрын
And a remote island is las islas malvinas aka the falklands
@DEV-rw7eu
@DEV-rw7eu 2 жыл бұрын
Bu- but what about the end credits after you beat the ender drago-
@Udot2
@Udot2 2 жыл бұрын
@@DEV-rw7eu that's a ender world
@pokemonpokemon4391
@pokemonpokemon4391 2 жыл бұрын
thats becouse you are god in minecraft
@lemau8458
@lemau8458 2 жыл бұрын
Nah, the god is you.
@maxdonaldson861
@maxdonaldson861 Жыл бұрын
The biggest challenge is to recognise the pleasure cube in the real world. Those who build them are obviously not going to make them look the way they are depicted in that comic strip. There are already many pleasure cubes on my phone's home screen, and I am currently typing a comment on a video within a pleasure cube.
@vermin5367
@vermin5367 Жыл бұрын
I was kinda waiting for him to bring that up lol
@vecipheragain
@vecipheragain Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@cc-dtv
@cc-dtv Жыл бұрын
America loves its fentanyl
@Nathan-pq7xe
@Nathan-pq7xe 10 ай бұрын
Your phone, or any of its apps, are not pleasure cubes. It only makes you produce dopamine, and only at low levels. A true pleasure cube would also produce serotonin and oxytocin (necessary for longer lasting satisfaction and happiness from social bonding), and all three at much higher quantities. The only thing that probably comes near a pleasure-cube is a high dose of heroin, and that only lasts for a very short time.
@kewlman5417
@kewlman5417 9 ай бұрын
@@Nathan-pq7xei think op meant that not in the sense of dopamine but in the sense of only being able to experience the experiences of others and not *be* in the content on said app
@MerryweatherMedia
@MerryweatherMedia 2 жыл бұрын
LOL I was just enjoying your videos and my own comic pops up!! I was so surprised hahaha
@banana-uo3be
@banana-uo3be 2 жыл бұрын
lol
@gabobei1991
@gabobei1991 2 жыл бұрын
Your comic made me unironically go to the Barber’s to get a new cut and stop eating pizza. If that’s my wake-up call, then I thank you for it, sir or ma’am, or omnivoid serpent of the distant planet of Feelgoodland.
@alex.g7317
@alex.g7317 Жыл бұрын
@@gabobei1991 doing your… son.
@alex.g7317
@alex.g7317 Жыл бұрын
Peter griffin
@Tunafishloverr
@Tunafishloverr Жыл бұрын
Amazing illustration 👏
@krombopulos_michael
@krombopulos_michael 2 жыл бұрын
I think people are turned off by the pleasure cube because its hard to imagine it not getting boring. It would be sort of like just eating granulated sugar instead of anything sweet that has sugar in it. We like to eat sweet things generally, but we also like the other flavours that come with eating sweet things, whether it's cake, chocolate, fruit, gummy bears, etc. There probably is a version of the pleasure cube that more accurately replicates the subtler "high" pleasures associated with things like achievement, but it's hard to conceive of that for most people. Instead it just sounds like you end up pumped full of drugs that keep you dopey but technically happy.
@wdwuccnxcnh7022
@wdwuccnxcnh7022 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly this
@smorcrux426
@smorcrux426 2 жыл бұрын
I was thinking about the "pleasure cube" as kind of a better simulation of this world, but even if it's pumping drugs into your brain: I don't think you know how that would feel in reality. The experience you're describing isn't great, but that's the thing: it's not great. The whole hypothetical question is "would you rather make your life a whole lot better, but also make it meaningless?"
@harshvardhanchouhan616
@harshvardhanchouhan616 2 жыл бұрын
Sometimes you need to experience hardships to appreciate happy time
@smorcrux426
@smorcrux426 2 жыл бұрын
@@harshvardhanchouhan616 you can experience hard times in the pleasure cube.
@harshvardhanchouhan616
@harshvardhanchouhan616 2 жыл бұрын
@@smorcrux426 you are right though how would we know if we are in one
@oceanman_8370
@oceanman_8370 2 жыл бұрын
I never thought I'd see a serious philosophical discussion based on something by the creator of "Internet Explorer chan" but here we are
@huuuuuuh2057
@huuuuuuh2057 2 жыл бұрын
Merryweathery is just as intellectually shallow as you'd think he is. He is extremely unfunny, untalented, banal, and panders to the lowest common denominator. His argument instantly falls apart as soon as it occurs to you that the experiences themselves have *inherent* meaning and value value, and it's not the dopamine behind them that gives them value.
@primo4915
@primo4915 2 жыл бұрын
@@huuuuuuh2057what experiences? the comic doesnt say what experiences are experienced in the cube, it just says that your brain gets fed seretonin and dopamine.
@huuuuuuh2057
@huuuuuuh2057 2 жыл бұрын
@@primo4915 yeah. Seratonin and dopamine do not have the inherent value that experiences have, therefore it would be moronic to get in the cube instead of continuing life as an adventurer
@nazukah2861
@nazukah2861 2 жыл бұрын
@@huuuuuuh2057 isn't that Merryweathers whole argument lol, the MC does the pleasure cube cuz she believes it'll give her more happiness but obviously it doesn't turn out that way
@kekero540
@kekero540 2 жыл бұрын
@@huuuuuuh2057 cope, he’s good. I don’t get why you’re so aggressive to this dude who just shitposts anime girl and gay comics.
@givemeadrinkbartender2838
@givemeadrinkbartender2838 2 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of this last summer. I bought a gaming pc and played skyrim all day. At first it was very rewarding but as weeks passed i started feeling strange at the end of each day i felt like I had wasted my day and it felt like every single day was exactly the same, eventually i got tired of playing and decided to read some books. After summer i started college and i only could play on weekends. That changed everything, now when weekends arrived i wanted to play videogames after studying the whole day, and it actually felt good. Recently i started going to the gym and my well being just increased even more. All this has made me realise one thing its responsibility and hard work what gives sense to our lives, its resting after a long day of work and seeing the results of our work what makes our lifes truly worth living.
@simeonw1481
@simeonw1481 Жыл бұрын
Like planting crops, working the fields and raising farm animals to make and enjoy good food
@alex.g7317
@alex.g7317 Жыл бұрын
@@simeonw1481 but we don’t do that… oh my goodness! Don’t tell me!
@Bigzthegreat
@Bigzthegreat Жыл бұрын
i have these same thoughts too
@Nathan7041
@Nathan7041 Жыл бұрын
Fresh air, exercise, sunshine, a dog, deleting social media, a glass of liquor or two. We're on to something, boys.
@htth3152
@htth3152 Жыл бұрын
Or simply variety and contrast.
@danielstatler954
@danielstatler954 Жыл бұрын
I've been saying this for so long. You imagine NOT a perfect world, but a perfect adventure, with just the right amount of challenge and satisfaction
@esterhammerfic
@esterhammerfic Жыл бұрын
And both of those can be simulated in the pleasure cube :)
@panzervpanther828
@panzervpanther828 9 ай бұрын
@@esterhammerficThe latter can’t because a perfect adventure has to have a degree of challenge and struggle, which, even if you enjoy the activity, don’t produce bliss. A person who loves climbing mountains will struggle and suffer from the pain of the climb, but will still do it because the reward makes it worth it, nobody climbs a mountain with a big smile all the way up.
@Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman
@Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman 9 ай бұрын
​@@panzervpanther828😂
@tubaraofeio1053
@tubaraofeio1053 2 жыл бұрын
"Did you know that the first Matrix was designed to be a perfect human world? Where none suffered, where everyone would be happy. It was a disaster. No one would accept the program. Entire crops were lost. Some believed we lacked the programming language to describe your perfect world. But I believe that, as a species, human beings define their reality through suffering and misery. The perfect world was a dream that your primitive cerebrum kept trying to wake up from. Which is why the Matrix was redesigned to this: the peak of your civilization. " -Agent smith
@aussieman4791
@aussieman4791 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah. Considering what was happening before people were plugged in, and these were the survivors of the war, I too would have been tearing at the walls to get out of that "perfect existence." But really that's what we do, we define our lives off misery and the more happy and carefree it is the more our subconscious says it's wrong.
@someguy4405
@someguy4405 2 жыл бұрын
It’s kind of funny that the machines had some debate or discussion over this, with some proposing a certain solution and others disagreeing with it.
@SolarFlareAmerica
@SolarFlareAmerica 2 жыл бұрын
I love how people take lines from a movie and then ascribe them to real life. Not calling anyone specific out here, but I've been noticing this trend lately, and I don't know about you all, but I certainly don't define my life off of misery.
@tubaraofeio1053
@tubaraofeio1053 2 жыл бұрын
@@SolarFlareAmerica well I chose this quote as I remembered this scene from the film and the explanation from Brit quite matched the one from smith, life would be meaningless with no suffering and pain, life would become boring, there would be no work no meaning, so the "suffering" smith refers to is daily inconveniences and loss tragedy and all that stuff, as those feelings in some way connect us make us feel, well alive, it's sort of like using hacks in GTA V, you get everything you are at the top, and from there, what can you do? You have everything and nothing to do, there was no work, that's why I quit the game, with everything on hand it just made the game have no purpose, now imagine that with your life, you do nothing all day, all that could be done has been done so you just sit at the top with no feelings and no emotions. so smith referred to the 20th century as the "peak of civilization" it was a time (in the films universe) where there were wars, loss, mundane activities, work, relationships because in the Animatrix film it is shown that humans do nothing all day, it is all done by machines.
@SolarFlareAmerica
@SolarFlareAmerica 2 жыл бұрын
@@tubaraofeio1053 bold of you to suggest that life would have meaning without pain and suffering. I agree that they're very noteworthy parts of life, but no meaning? Life already has no meaning other than what we ascribe to it. In a fictional universe without it, New meaning could still be found by those who experienced it. Would it be strange, perhaps even unnerving and alien? Probably. Living makes you feel alive. All the additional layers simply add to that experience, or take away from it. I can easily imagine a world in which I didn't have the additional stress of knowing my family will die one day, and I'd certainly sleep better in it. My little brother discovered cheats for GTA V and thinks they're the best part of the experience. He constantly attempts to break the game using them. He discovered an enjoyment for an alternative form of play, even with all the original game purpose being rendered meaningless as you describe. Except, it's not. The game was made to be enjoyed, and the cheats ARE a part of that. If that's not your cup of tea that's ok too. Loved the animatrix. I loved the suggestion that peace WAS possible, right up until humanity clouded the skies in a self-destructive fervor. Of course, this whole thing is about a comic about a drugged up dystopia, one I too shun. While the line blurs immensely between digital and physical reality, the one through line is we enjoy having the freedom to experience life on our own terms. If such a system was devised, it would need to be as if not more complex as irl to stimulate the human beings within it as well as allowing them to intermingle.
@Dutchguy.94
@Dutchguy.94 2 жыл бұрын
Huxley himself summed it up quite nicely: “But I don't want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin.”
@malfaroangel3896
@malfaroangel3896 2 жыл бұрын
Contradict himself when he says he wants God. That’s means he does want comfort. The comfort of believing that there’s something out there. That we are more meaningful than everything else. To be more free is to realize we are not special, and God isn’t real.
@TheSkel161
@TheSkel161 2 жыл бұрын
@@malfaroangel3896 if you consider God a comfortable idea then you haven’t really considered God.
@miguelpereira9859
@miguelpereira9859 2 жыл бұрын
@@malfaroangel3896 Depends what vision of God one has I guess
@gustavusadolphus4344
@gustavusadolphus4344 2 жыл бұрын
@@malfaroangel3896 Cringe atheist detected
@TheRealZeke2003
@TheRealZeke2003 2 жыл бұрын
@@gustavusadolphus4344 Imagine unironically believing in Sky daddy.
@Mewza
@Mewza Жыл бұрын
For me, the thing that would actually turn me away from the pleasure cube is how everything would feel after I got out. There won't be anything in the world that would compare to what I experienced in the cube, and that might send me into a depression or worse.
@Mewza
@Mewza Жыл бұрын
Even if you were to stay there for your whole life, something still could go wrong, like the power failing or a natural disaster. And all that time you are out of the cube for short matinence would feel like the worst experience of your life ever, because there's nothing else to compare it to.
@haze8969
@haze8969 Жыл бұрын
That would be called withdraw. The cube is a drug.
@nitsuga678
@nitsuga678 Жыл бұрын
So a phone.
@megaultradamn
@megaultradamn Жыл бұрын
@@haze8969 soma
@zephyr1741
@zephyr1741 Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of the "true level" clip from Rick and morty
@williamspell5692
@williamspell5692 Жыл бұрын
Okay, but seriously, the pleasure cube seems hellishly addicting. Just as Morty freaked out when Summer pulled him off of the "true level" platform, the inhabitants of these pleasure cubes, including the time traveler, would too. Becoming accustomed to intense, constant pleasure would have them perceive anything less as the greatest pain and suffering they have ever experienced in their lives, even as Hell itself.
@nurponurpo5886
@nurponurpo5886 3 ай бұрын
Exactly- going inside a pleasure cube and leaving would be like waking up and having to leave your warm bed, but amped up by 100000%
@gogl0l386
@gogl0l386 2 жыл бұрын
"So why don't you just get drunk all of the time, eat rubbish and jack of all day?" Quite bold of you to assume I don't
@infernocop1009
@infernocop1009 2 жыл бұрын
yo same
@edwardcardozo8325
@edwardcardozo8325 2 жыл бұрын
UwU
@SrSander
@SrSander 2 жыл бұрын
a lot of people do that, really XD
@pequenoperezoso3743
@pequenoperezoso3743 2 жыл бұрын
@@SrSander are they happy though? Are you happy? Am I happy?
@goodname9154
@goodname9154 2 жыл бұрын
Based
@sqvam
@sqvam 2 жыл бұрын
This reminds me a lot about a a spongebob episode where Squidward moves into a place where everything he wants is there, mainly the annoyance of Spongebob and Patrick; later in the episode Squidward seems to be depressed, tired of doing the same thing over and over again. Some time later he obtains a vacuum cleaner, and starts terrorizing other citizens; (Pretty sure Spongebob and Patrick show up some time around this point but don't remember.) Anyways, Squidward realizes that Spongebob and Patrick are the only things keeping him going, as when you have done everything, life is dull, there is nothing left to do. Or as you put it "When people climb a mountain, they don't do it just to see the view at the top, the preparation, journey, and experience that comes with it is more important to them than the end." Note: Went off of memory, don't remember a lot from the episode.
@alvin3978
@alvin3978 2 жыл бұрын
Yessss this is actually my favorite episode, this explains it
@p3el_
@p3el_ 2 жыл бұрын
While those activies ended up being boring, that-- *pleasure box--* doesnt end, nor ended up being boring
@exciton9861
@exciton9861 2 жыл бұрын
@@p3el_ Well lets says the pleasure doesn't end. Endless pleasure mean zero pain, zero pain means no gain. Sadness is beautiful, they exist to make happiness more happier. If we become god and can be and do everything we ever wanted, what's the point? there's no story there's no struggle, there's no conflict nor climax, if that doesn't exist then there will be nothing to love.
@fotisvon9943
@fotisvon9943 2 жыл бұрын
this is a good thought. I think the pleasure cube will be powerful in that people will use it for both a perfect life and for tormenting others.
@tasfa10
@tasfa10 2 жыл бұрын
I think you kind of dodged the question by assuming the cube wouldn't be that good. If a certain amount of pain/hardship turns out to be optimal for maximum feelings of well being, then why wouldn't the cube provide that? Assuming the cube would just provide momentary superficial pleasurable things at every second is to assume the cube doesn't do a great job to begin with, since pleasurable things at every second is probably not the best way to maximize pleasure. The moment you become bored with pleasure, or dissatisfied with its lack of meaning, that's not pleasure anymore and therefore the cube isn't fulfilling its purpose. I think I saw something once about people who had some condition where they couldn't stop orgasming non stop and of course that wasn't in any way pleasureful for them. Instead of assuming the cube would overwhelm you with supposedly good things you should assume the cube does a perfect job of ensuring maximum well being even if that doesn't mean an infinite feeling of orgasm. Then the real question is why are people afraid of that on the sole basis that the feelings are virtually induced. The real issue is not that the cube wouldn't produce maximum well being, it's that people believe induced well being is not worth it. And then you could go on about how our feelings in the real world are still induced in some way, how our perception of reality is still fabricated in our brains and only exists there anyway, etc. You could probably tie it with the dread people feel from the simulation theory, which makes them feel like all of their lives could go from meaningful to meaningless based solely on whether the experience of their lives is virtually induced and not on whether the simulation is optimal. I liked the video but I would've taken it in a different direction.
@ItalianMappingBestMapper
@ItalianMappingBestMapper 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I had the same thought. In my opinion the cube would lead objectively to the most happiness, people misunderstand it by thinking it would just be a drug induced stupor but honestly why shouldn't it also simulate an ideal life, with hard moments included. Honestly the reason someone would reject it, imo is pretty much purely dogmatic, which I do
@MistaGeenie
@MistaGeenie 2 жыл бұрын
Great reply, yeah I have similar feelings
@desamster
@desamster 2 жыл бұрын
The cube is a metaphor for addiction and the decay of society. The constant seeking of pleasure and avoidance of pain. The sacrifice of long term well-being for an immediate fix. While attractive at first, it is in fact suffering, as you get stuck in a loop where you have to keep feeding the beast. The longer you go on with it, the more it imprisons you. You become isolated, alienated, your life deprived of meaning, as you sit in your cube, all day every day. Stop now and the emptiness will hit you harder than ever, as there's nothing left for you outside of the cube. Nothing worthwhile to live for. You've become a slave of the cube. Even an increasingly sophisticated and convincing virtual world is still just a representation. It's not alive, it's bits and bytes on a computer. None of it is real. As the color example in the video illustrates, nothing new can come out of the cube other than what's been put there by the outside world. The cube is a lie, an illusion. The dystopian part comes from a society whose social bonds and moral values have eroded. Where more and more people no longer engage in meaningful human interaction and instead withdraw into cubes. Where you're unscrupulously being offered the cube at every turn, because it's good business. Meaning is lost, only hedonism and money worship remain. We already have cubes. Internet addiction, video games (or the classic substance abuse). People looking for an escape and opting out of society altogether. But a real sense of happines and accomplishment can only come from leading a fulfilling life. If you don't, you'll find life slipping through your fingers and in the end are left with nothing. Choose life.
@desamster
@desamster 2 жыл бұрын
If the cube doesn't do a good job of producing happiness as it leaves out pain and hardship, don't we then have the perfect cube already? (Life)
@yashvangala
@yashvangala 2 жыл бұрын
I agree. I think the cube giving us the equivalent of a candy all the time will just increase our tolerance to dopamine and serotonin. Instead, a *better* pleasure cube would be something like the *fake* good place from the show **the good place**. Our world is sad and insufferable because of the unfairness, the injustice, the class segregation, etc. so many factors of your life are decided before you are even born. The wealth of your parents, the country you were born in, the disability you may be born with. Life is so unfair and that's what makes the world sad and miserable. In my opinion, The ideal pleasure cube would be a world where everything is fair and everyone is born equal. Their actions will have concequences and they will have pain for the bad concequences. But that's what brings the higher pleasure that is different from the pleasure you get from eating a candybar
@Simons_Valere
@Simons_Valere 2 жыл бұрын
Alan Watts: "Let's suppose that you were able every night to dream any dream that you wanted to dream. And that you could, for example, have the power within one night to dream 75 years of time. Or any length of time you wanted to have. And you would, naturally as you began on this adventure of dreams, you would fulfill all your wishes. You would have every kind of pleasure you could conceive. And after several nights of 75 years of total pleasure each, you would say "Well, that was pretty great." But now let's have a surprise. Let's have a dream which isn't under control. Where something is gonna happen to me that I don't know what it's going to be. And you would dig that and come out of that and say "Wow, that was a close shave, wasn't it?" And then you would get more and more adventurous, and you would make further and further out gambles as to what you would dream. And finally, you would dream ... where you are now. You would dream the dream of living the life that you are actually living today."
@bob_smite
@bob_smite 2 жыл бұрын
Tiktok has been one of the closest things to a pleasure cube imo. I've experienced going through the app and then when I become disinterested, I snap back into reality half an hour later. Watching other people doing the same looks disturbing, kind of like that comic shown in the video. Every video is like a hit of dopamine, so when there's a boring video, the user subconsciously swipes away to find a better one.
@dr.jekyllproject7172
@dr.jekyllproject7172 2 жыл бұрын
that's why I deleted the app
@50Steaks68
@50Steaks68 2 жыл бұрын
That’s why I never got it in the first place
@coagulatedsalts4711
@coagulatedsalts4711 2 жыл бұрын
SAME. i deleted the app because it was messing with my attention span. i went from being able to watch 45 minute long videos to barely making it past a minute before switching to tiktok. it got so bad that after i deleted the app, my fingers still twitched whenever i was bored back to where the app was subconsciously. I've been clean for 9 months now and I'm still going strong.
@Exo88712
@Exo88712 2 жыл бұрын
Also youtube shorts now
@50Steaks68
@50Steaks68 2 жыл бұрын
@@Exo88712 that sucks
@poundlandspeedwagonrequiem
@poundlandspeedwagonrequiem 2 жыл бұрын
so much lore in a fucking anime drawing, what a time to live also in a way, soma from brave new world is the pleasure cube in pill form, huxley was ahead of his time
@Coppergasm
@Coppergasm 2 жыл бұрын
old timey scifi writers were very ahead of time in general i think
@Celestial1000
@Celestial1000 2 жыл бұрын
"Anime drawing"
@phantomwarrior8686
@phantomwarrior8686 2 жыл бұрын
@@Coppergasm not all of them. And also they were not "ahead of time" they actually made very predictable things, things like that always happened since reach pleasure and comfort was and still is the main goal of technological advancement which may leads to these consequences. It's not like he was writing for future generations, if he predicted a thing that happens today it's just a natural coincidence.
@Coppergasm
@Coppergasm 2 жыл бұрын
@@phantomwarrior8686 our species figured out that we should wash our hands after taking care of a corpse before delivering a baby like 200 years ago (im probably being generous). I think its fair to applaud scifi writers for coming up with concepts like vr in the 50s
@phantomwarrior8686
@phantomwarrior8686 2 жыл бұрын
@@Coppergasm this is nothing special to be honest. We always had hygiene even though we did not use it in 200 years ago. So, it's still not special to supposedly "predict" future in sci-fi books, because being honest, they didn't predict anything.
@KingOfTheDerp
@KingOfTheDerp 2 жыл бұрын
I'm genuinely very happy that I found a channel that has a similar sense of humor to mine, cherishes the same video games as I do (minecraft, I liked your jokes involving it too lol), while also producing really thought-invoking, highly highly produced content on issues I consider on a somewhat frequent basis. From your videos on climate change, to policy, to this one on philosophy, I appreciate your interest and good insight on science, the social sciences, and parts of the humanities. Your content is illuminating and inspiring. Be proud of yourself and know that you have made me happy from just the few videos I have watched so far! The topic this video deals with really resonates with me and has kinda been a fundamental question to my identity and drive, especially as a person who struggles with depression, and I'm glad it resonates with someone else as well. I feel a lot less alone :D
@Zivety
@Zivety Жыл бұрын
What if there is an error, and it's just unending terror and nightmare that you can't get out of.
@anoobhey5798
@anoobhey5798 2 жыл бұрын
Assuming this hypothetical future had solved death by aging, I think the pleasure cube would be a good alternative to suicide if you got tired of living.
@__Razer
@__Razer 2 жыл бұрын
When I die, I hope there's a pleasure cube in the sky for me. I heard that if you're a bad guy, you get sent to the underground pain cube instead.
@varyhandsomeguy
@varyhandsomeguy 2 жыл бұрын
@@__Razer I would really enjoy the pain cube if it looks like a woman.
@animepeople8744
@animepeople8744 2 жыл бұрын
you mean as a mean to suicide? doesn't seem you'll last long without food in there to me
@lue64
@lue64 2 жыл бұрын
@@varyhandsomeguy uh
@default2591
@default2591 2 жыл бұрын
Why go through all the hassle of getting into the cube while true infinite freedom is as close as turning over your wrist?
@ArkenTheAmerikan
@ArkenTheAmerikan 2 жыл бұрын
Modern society focuses far too much on raw pleasure and on isolating ourselves from harm as much as possible. In the technological advancement and comfort that we find ourselves now, we've fundamentally lost touch with a crucial part of our humanity. An excellent video as always my man, you're making some of the most creative and original content on this platform.
@-haclong2366
@-haclong2366 2 жыл бұрын
That's the issue with Liberalism, it is too much about individualism and atomisation if favour of capitalism and consumer wants rather than societal advancements. The happiness cube is the natural end result of hyperindividualism.
@ArkenTheAmerikan
@ArkenTheAmerikan 2 жыл бұрын
That isn't liberalism. That's Randian libertarianism. There's individualism and then there's radical individualism. One of them is the basis of a free society, the other is the downfall of a free society. I, for example, am a liberal.
@00fgytduydrtu
@00fgytduydrtu 2 жыл бұрын
@@ArkenTheAmerikan I would dissagree, classical liberalism and the enlightenment are the forefathers of Both libertarianism and Marxism, all three say the highest good in a society is the individual, rather than a greater goal, like the Nation or God.
@Vurglesplat
@Vurglesplat 2 жыл бұрын
Which period of older society do you think would be better to aim for then? (Not rhetorical, genuine question) I really cannot think of a period where most people were less focused on those aspects, more than we were generally just worse at securing pleasure or the ability to live without reliance on others at those times. I mean I guess there are periods where some great zeitgeist such as a religious or political movement seizes the reigns, but those tend to be either impermenent or get pretty bad over time. To blame technological advancement is also a bit questionable, as technology clearly has the ability to make it easier to interact with and maintain bonds that wouldn't be possible otherwise. I do think that the current implementation of many pieces of technology have more nefarious motives than helping people interact, but that shouldn't be mistaken for the actual technology itself.
@00fgytduydrtu
@00fgytduydrtu 2 жыл бұрын
@@Vurglesplat I think you have an odd hatred off meaning in one's life. The truth is, any civilisation that didn't posses a central goal for its existance, may it be a Religion, the Nation, ect, will collapse into fragmentation and mass immorality. Our society is the exception, in such a regard and thats why its heading towards collapse day by the day. You might consider all of society working for a same goal as ''authoritarian'', because to do so you must give away some of your indiviudal freedom, but may I ask, what is the purpose of such a freedom if it restricts you from working to something thats far greater than yourself, alongside hurting in most circmustanses your personal life as well?
@Anonymous-bi5pv
@Anonymous-bi5pv Жыл бұрын
If you're still aware that you're inside of the cube then it's not worth it. But if you're also experiencing a permanent lucid dream or simulation where you can live the life you want to live and have what you desire, I would absolutely go for it.
@megaultradamn
@megaultradamn Жыл бұрын
Imagine being born into the cube 💀
@SuvarnaIyengar
@SuvarnaIyengar Жыл бұрын
Yeah and then you are permanently trapped in a fake world which has no meaning whatsoever and you can't affect anything. Doesn't sound good to me.
9 ай бұрын
I think you just watch the boring world around you, you just dont care because you're happy anyway.
@56independent42
@56independent42 8 ай бұрын
"Lucid dream" implies you already know.
@Yetta_
@Yetta_ 7 ай бұрын
@death exist
@IllD.
@IllD. Жыл бұрын
This is very idealisitic. I feel as if a lot more people would step into the cube than you'd think. If someone no longer has any attatchment to their character, honesty, or the material world, they would step into the cube and stay there forever, no questions asked. Sadly, I feel as if this is the majority of society as of now.
@lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
@lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 Жыл бұрын
But the more i think about it, the more it feels like a solution, too many people that are dispossed and discontented with the system and drowning in apathy and envy, why not give them paradise already, they will consume less resources.
@TheWandererOfDreams
@TheWandererOfDreams Жыл бұрын
I'm kinda sad. Might as well.
@williamfrancis5367
@williamfrancis5367 2 жыл бұрын
Could not a virtual reality simulator like the cube aid with developing new experiences and better understanding of ourselves? I would never have been able to slay dragons in real life but I can in Skyrim. I could never design a city but I can in city skylines. I could never be a star ship captain in my own space opera, but I can in mass effect. I could never guide a species from cell to interstellar empire but I can in Spore. Even though these experiences aren't real I still feel a sense satisfaction and pride in my virtual achievements from winning an impossible battle in medieval total war or completing a round on papers please without any mistakes. Imagine using the cube to explore a perfect replication of renaissance Florence, renact battles during the English civil war, LARP as a vampire or fly like a bird. Or indeed eating a 400g steak fillet surf and turf without the cost to you or the climate. Indeed, it's understandable why some might prefer the virtual to the real.
@thomasa.anderson9055
@thomasa.anderson9055 2 жыл бұрын
He makes the argument that simulating an experience is not the same as the actual experience, but what if that's the point? Tons of people like killing zombies in video games, but no one in there right mind would actually want to experience a zombie apocalypse.
@potatoboy6094
@potatoboy6094 2 жыл бұрын
Thomas makes a good point, the only reason any of those experiences seem cool to you, is that you know you are in a simulation, you can leave at any time, and are out of harms way, if they were to make you think you truly were in the Middle Ages, or in Skyrim, I doubt you’d be quite as adventurous
@williamfrancis5367
@williamfrancis5367 2 жыл бұрын
@@potatoboy6094. But nobody can actually be in Skyrim or time travel back to the middle ages. Reality imposes limitations on us the virtual can liberate us from.
@potatoboy6094
@potatoboy6094 2 жыл бұрын
@@williamfrancis5367 Im not doubting that, I’m saying that if the virtual reality was so immersive that you truly felt like you were there and weren’t just in a simulation, or if the simulation makes you forget that it’s not real, you might be less likely to be as ballsy as you would be by knowing that none of it really matters
@williamfrancis5367
@williamfrancis5367 2 жыл бұрын
@@potatoboy6094. Just like the privileged in the real world.
@okb6436
@okb6436 2 жыл бұрын
"When you play chess, you don't want to throw the opponent's queen out the window, you want to win following the rules and without cheating, the same happens with life" - Abraham Lincoln, probably
@ExternalDialogue
@ExternalDialogue 2 жыл бұрын
yeah because you get a bigger seratonin release when you beat the game following the rules. All our experiences are the products of electrical signals and chemicals, a sufficiently advanced machine could replicate the feeling of satisfaction indefinatly and simply disable our ability to be bored.
@okb6436
@okb6436 2 жыл бұрын
@@ExternalDialogue I find amazing that a set of electrical charges and chemical reaccions ocurring in the brain can create a sensation of conciusness, and males us feel and understand this world.
@jupiter1789
@jupiter1789 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah you don't whant to throw a queen out of the window illegally
@surprisedchar2458
@surprisedchar2458 2 жыл бұрын
@@ExternalDialogue that’s great. But if you can hook up to a machine, why bother living at all? At that point you only exist to die. You may as well take the option that will always be cheaper. The rope, the stool, and a well tied knot.
@wontcreep
@wontcreep 2 жыл бұрын
have you heard about the game rust? the playerbase's motives might surprise a lot of people
@eanschaan9392
@eanschaan9392 2 жыл бұрын
The idea of a life devoid of any meaning sounds terrifying. For as much as I wonder now what I am to do with myself for another 4-8 decades, at least I know that when it ends, it will have been real. At least I have the *chance* to do something with it that isn't useless.
@ivandmitriev5748
@ivandmitriev5748 2 минут бұрын
I think you can compare this concept to salted caramel. We as a specie prefer everything sweet, it's the way our brain is trained to work. He wants all the sugar he can get to. But too much of it not only would be overwhelming, but also will dull down the feeling of ecstasy. This is why we need a bit of salt in our sugar to really feel it
@Mind1e55
@Mind1e55 2 жыл бұрын
"dating is reduced to a fancy dinner followed by a one night stand" that still is much better than what we currently have
@coagulatedsalts4711
@coagulatedsalts4711 2 жыл бұрын
i get nervous thinking about romance because I'm gay but i have a very conservative-ish belief of waiting until marriage and dating with the intent to marry. with apps like grindr and the subculture that being gay has with partying and sexual liberation, it feels like people are entitled to have sex with others whether they like it or not. :((
@GioGio14412
@GioGio14412 2 жыл бұрын
@@coagulatedsalts4711 well according to Christianity marriage is the union between a man and a woman, so you will never actually marry according to it so unless you wanna die virgin you shouldn't think about that
@mark.fedorov
@mark.fedorov 2 жыл бұрын
@@GioGio14412 he didn't mention Christianity though
@prorokdc
@prorokdc 2 жыл бұрын
@@GioGio14412 You can marry not by church
@sheepketchup9059
@sheepketchup9059 2 жыл бұрын
@@coagulatedsalts4711 sexual liberation is cool, but no, consent is a thing, you're not entitled to have sex with anyone.
@ernstschmidt4725
@ernstschmidt4725 2 жыл бұрын
back then at school, i read that the thing is humans not only seek happiness or pleasure. they seek meaning in existence and/or understanding of it. kinda just like huxley said in the twin stories of brave new world/the island. this idea is also presented in Maslow's Hierarchy of needs where things like self-actualization or esteem are present as things that people search after they solve more basic needs.
@imnotabird1118
@imnotabird1118 Жыл бұрын
Humans seek meaning or understanding or etc... for happinnes or pleasure
@soeih8864
@soeih8864 Жыл бұрын
@@imnotabird1118 no. They seek meaning for bliss. Bliss is the thing we all are searching for. Pleasure or happiness is a short simulation of a bliss "light" version. We are trying to find bliss by doing alot of things which give us pleasure or we try to maximize happiness to finally find bliss. So a happy cube wouls never worj because bliss comes from turning off aroganz. Then you will accept truth and stop forcing yourself to live your lie and try to see it as truth. The truth our heart is seeking. It's seeking for the connection with our creator. The one who made everything. Who made the universe, time.. everything Once someone turns off their arrogance its more clear than glas Not IQ, Money or yeas of studying is needed to understand reality and be in bliss It's a pure heart. So every human is abel to achive it by giving up their arrogance and ignorance La ilaha ill Allah
@imnotabird1118
@imnotabird1118 Жыл бұрын
@@soeih8864 "bliss" "heart" "allah" so happiness and pleasure my dude. U r just complicating things because of ur stupidbrain
@user-cx9nc4pj8w
@user-cx9nc4pj8w Жыл бұрын
@@soeih8864 What about all the poor people who where born before his coming? Why will they never be able to experience this? Or those who were never exposed to his message? And if everything needs a creator, who created the creator?
@soeih8864
@soeih8864 Жыл бұрын
​@@user-cx9nc4pj8w ​Before the coming of prophet mohammed they where other prophets Some we know like Jesu, Moses with a huge impact but also alot of prophets to a small group of people like a village or maybe even less. Every human had the chance to accept or denie the truth when it was glas clear to them. IF they did not have the chance then there will be another just test for them maybe in the hearafter. We dont know how but we know that Allah will be testing everyone and no one will be in hellfire or die as disbeliver without knowing of the truth and denying it. The Allmighty is absolut Just and it will be proven to everyone their guild. There will be no one who says im unjustly in hellfire. The only thing they will say is beg their Creator to give them another Chances. They will not get another chance bcs they will die just the same they did again and again. Also the last question is paradox because the name says it. THE CREATOR is not a creation so the CREATOR is not CREATED because he is the CREATOR. The Creator is outside of Space and Time. Absolut Perfect and unimaginable for our brains. One of the biggest gifts to us is that we will be abel to see our Creator in Heaven.
@MistaMushoo
@MistaMushoo Жыл бұрын
I know it's been a year but this video keeps showing up in my brain every once in a while and I felt like leaving my own thoughts here. To me, the pleasure cube idea is something that will ultimately fail over time. Even with all the hypotheticals and the idea that you may not know you're in a pleasure cube, I still strongly feel that the cube's effects will simply just diminish over time until eventually it just stops working for us. Sure it works for maybe 5 or 10 years but I don't forsee it being something you're stuck with for life. Eventually, people will start to see the illusion for what it really is, and when they do, they'll simply just get bored of it, and that's if we're in a perfect world where the pleasure cube doesn't permanently fuck up your brain's chemical makeup beyond repair. It's like eating the same exact food every day. Eventually, you start to despise the taste. It also falls into the idea that the human mind cannot simply create something entirely new either in the way this video explains. You are destined to run out of things to do eventually, and, when you do, the illusion cannot sustain itself afterwards. If anything, I think the pleasure cube will actually end up making people worse. Pure Dopamine is not the same as contentment. It would be like those occassional posts about people dreaming they had a whole loving family and kids and then waking up suddenly to realize they were never real. It would spiral out of control incredibly quickly afterwards. TL;DR: The cube sucks anyway!!! This shit don't even fuckin' work!!!!
@Bigzthegreat
@Bigzthegreat Жыл бұрын
The running out of things to do ties in with immortality. If I were to live in a hyperreality pleasure cube and I didn't wipe my memories every time I decided to go on a new adventure, what is there to do? Eventually I'll run out of things.. In fact, what if I'm just another experience?
@MrZzdannyzz
@MrZzdannyzz 2 жыл бұрын
Pleasure =\= focus The zone mentioned in the US army study is akin to the meditative state. It's not pure pleasure, it's a right balance of pleasure, discomfort, curiosity, stimulus and reward.
@spazzohawk9591
@spazzohawk9591 2 жыл бұрын
There is something unsettling similar about the pleasure cube and mobile phones/TV. I don’t care if I sound like a boomer when I say this but people, including myself, spend too much time on screens.
@potatoboy6094
@potatoboy6094 2 жыл бұрын
Agreed, maybe the addictions talking, but I mostly use it as a distraction of the mundane and boring reality we’re forced to live and work in, most people have to work all the time just to stay alive, I’m sure many people would love to travel, and work out, and eat good food and feel love and pleasure naturally, but most of us can only afford a few hours of staring at a screen and hallucinating that it’s moving or that we’re anywhere except where we are, so unfortunately, we’d need to change a lot to be able to break out of where we are
@miguelpereira9859
@miguelpereira9859 2 жыл бұрын
Easy dopamine hit you are definitely right and it's not just a boomer thing. Obviously the technology itself isn't bad tho, for example you can use a smartphone to read books and talk with relatives on the other side of the world
@alexsiemers7898
@alexsiemers7898 2 жыл бұрын
There’s something to be said about just watching content (watching someone climb a mountain) as opposed to playing a game with its own set of challenges and earned rewards (a game like Celeste)
@spazzohawk9591
@spazzohawk9591 2 жыл бұрын
@@miguelpereira9859 yeah the technology is great, but most people’s smarter than average monkey brains aren’t well suited to using them only a reasonable amount
@liamcallahan9693
@liamcallahan9693 2 жыл бұрын
Andrew Solomon is quoted as saying "The opposite of depression is not happiness, but vitality." or as I understand it, the ability and regularity to experience the full spectrum of emotions, all of its euphoric highs and grieving lows. Also another note: in the modern world, cleaving the pleasures in two between higher and lower is less helpful by the day. Take modern music for example. One of my favorite bands, Queens of the Stone Age, released an album, Songs for the Deaf, that is fantastic in a way that I would say is conducive to "higher pleasure", but just simply, unequivocally, would not exist without drugs. Many of the "higher pleasures" we may enjoy today, from music, to film, to literature, are creative expressions that simply couldn't exist in the form they do without the lower pleasures- alcohol, sex, drugs. I'm not really sure where else to go on this, as my concern as a human being just is being any amount of happy at all, but I leave with 2 questions: 1.) Did John Stuart Mill have an answer for the prompt I just gave above, or is this more of a product of the modern era, and 2.) Is dopamine that leads to creative expression inherently more valuable than dopamine for its own sake, like you would get in the pleasure cube?
@mhavock
@mhavock Жыл бұрын
Yes, "pleasure" can mean many different things, it may be too broad a word. There are several areas we need to examine further. Firstly, we would have to examine the make up of 'simple' (like sex, drugs etc) and 'higher' (music, art) pleasures to determine if they are just social and environmental programming/conditioning. At the very basic level, they seem (more externally) sensory based. In contrast, some monks claim meditation (internal process) allows them to reach higher pleasure than world experiences provide. Yet, after a while they come out of meditation to preform their duties and serve the world. This may negate the 'pleasure box' idea as being a prolonged scenario. Then we have to examine what is the purpose of the pleasure, eg is it a healing mechanism for the brain /body? Does it counter act pain and trauma? Does it actually heal the 'hardware' of the brain/body? When things are healed up enough, will the person naturally seek less pleasure? Finally, we would look at what happens to people without enough pleasure in their life. For example, currently the medical community says that "anti social personality disorders" like psychopathy and sociopathy is partially due to the brains inability to produce enough serotonin in certain brain regions. Serotonin is considered as major contributor to people feeling happy. These types of people apparently have less empathy and take more (socially unacceptable) risks, and dont care if they hurt others. The theory is they dont have enough serotonin in certain brain areas that would allow them to act socially acceptable or limit their bad behaviors ; and they developed this way due to trauma or other factors with no way to easily go back. Its a large topic. For some people it maybe something pleasureable to look into. 🤣
@zachary9925
@zachary9925 Жыл бұрын
the 1800 version of this comic is in a drive-thru lane: "Don't worry, it looks like food, it tastes like food, it's definitely not food, but it will keep you alive. Though, health is no guarantee."
@wompastompa3692
@wompastompa3692 Жыл бұрын
What if the real pleasure cube was the friends we made along the way?
@Freshline_
@Freshline_ 2 жыл бұрын
Freedom is the most important both practically and ethically
@wave1090
@wave1090 2 жыл бұрын
How do you know you aren't in a simulation already and that your freedom is just an illusion?
@primo4915
@primo4915 2 жыл бұрын
@@wave1090 what if i am? would that change anything? the point is that i dont know if i am or not so it doesnt matter.
@stonedape2406
@stonedape2406 2 жыл бұрын
@@wave1090 to programme this reality as a simulation, you would need to programme infinite, which is impossible, since infinite is not a number.
@informitas0117
@informitas0117 2 жыл бұрын
Freedom is wastly over valued and I don't mean that in any authoritarian way. If you had a set mission that brought you joy and fulfillment, freedom would be less valuable.
@IGNACY-fp8zo
@IGNACY-fp8zo 2 жыл бұрын
@@wave1090 Then it doesn’t matter if you’re not free
@m136dalie
@m136dalie 2 жыл бұрын
1:04 "Beauty is just the visual input that produces serotonin in the brain" Gonna have to say that's a definite NOPE not true. The common idea that serotonin or dopamine are purely responsible for feelings of "goodness" or to stretch it even further the appreciation of aesthetics is absolutely not a proven concept. These neurotransmitters are found throughout the body and perform many different functions (particularly digestion and movement). They play a role in emotion regulation and behaviour but so do many other neurotransmitters. Saying serotonin=happy isn't even an oversimplification it's just wrong. Love the video though this is just a pet peeve of mine.
@fluffynator6222
@fluffynator6222 2 жыл бұрын
This is the central flaw of this video. Thinking that pure happiness would just be one simple process. If it was that easy we could probably already jam pure Serotonin into our brain.
@annic5878
@annic5878 2 жыл бұрын
We already do. Tf you think drug addicts are?
@ldelgg
@ldelgg 2 жыл бұрын
Plus, art isnt necessarily what makes us happy. It is something whose effort we can appreciate, whose painters emotions, thoughts, goals and views are projected onto. Good art can range from what makes us the happiest, to what gives us the deepest thoughts, insights and existential questions.
@domo4563
@domo4563 2 жыл бұрын
Found the r/Neuro user
@phantomwarrior8686
@phantomwarrior8686 2 жыл бұрын
Here we have a doctor, my guys
@fawx3684
@fawx3684 Жыл бұрын
Eternal pleasure is essentially identical to death. To have one unchanging experience is to have no experience and therefore to have no consciousness and to be dead
@TheMagnumDon
@TheMagnumDon 11 ай бұрын
I already knew the meaning of Life before even watching this video Life isn't about Enjoying It as much as Possible Life is about Suffering and Overcoming it
@sweed6487
@sweed6487 2 жыл бұрын
I feel like Evangelion itself is a really good counter-argument with the entire escapism and exploiting pleasure=bad sort of thing, the cube gives me major instrumentality vibes
@mayabartolabac
@mayabartolabac 2 жыл бұрын
Now that you point it out the similarities are crystal clear for me. I think the part where Shinji chooses to accept the existence of pain and suffering in life rather than choosing this instrumentality BS is just so powerful to me, and I didn't have a clear idea until your comment.
@qm230
@qm230 2 жыл бұрын
Yup
@hazzahawk3718
@hazzahawk3718 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@beanburger5689
@beanburger5689 2 жыл бұрын
No
@Scourgeoftengri
@Scourgeoftengri Жыл бұрын
No.
@archangel4597
@archangel4597 2 жыл бұрын
Holy shit this comic has illustrated exactly what I was thinking for years of what VR will inevitably evolve into
@turdbergler657
@turdbergler657 2 жыл бұрын
Home Depot! I'd like your finest fertilizer
@trailwaver404
@trailwaver404 2 жыл бұрын
Metaverse
@phantomwarrior8686
@phantomwarrior8686 2 жыл бұрын
VR is impossible to evolve until this point. Just a silly thought you have. Not even in 100 years using virtual reality it will be able to imitate reality. Also technology is limited, it has issues such as feeling dizzy when playing VR or the necessity of better graphs and interaction. We won't evolve to Player number 1, be sure.
@dylanc9174
@dylanc9174 2 жыл бұрын
@@phantomwarrior8686 Of course it won't look like reality, and it can't do everything. But the effect is the same to someone who just wants to be in VR all day. You can do more than you think you can judging by the way you talk. I would say you aren't someone who has tried VR for extended periods of time. On VRchat alone I have found VR to be improving by the month, even if the hardware is slow to change.
@phantomwarrior8686
@phantomwarrior8686 2 жыл бұрын
@@dylanc9174 VR is not the future, people will not give up their real lives and responsibilities to live in such stupid and artificial environment.
@Cokk9ine
@Cokk9ine Жыл бұрын
Imagine a hypothetical pleasure machine that hooks directly into your brain. The pleasure machine looks exactly like reality, but you can be whoever you want, with whatever abilities you want. I feel like most people would plug into the pleasure machine. Imagine living your life just as it is in real life, but you can fly.
@georgiykireev9678
@georgiykireev9678 Жыл бұрын
I think I would do that, but never really use the abilities. I thought about the hypothetical scenario of essentially getting god mode and being able to mold reality to your liking, but I think the best way of using that would be to just live an eternal but ordinary life where you achieve things through your own work, getting everything you want with minimal effort would get boring pretty quickly
@samblackstone3400
@samblackstone3400 2 жыл бұрын
Really liked this video. It touched on a ton of bases about why more pleasure does not equal more good. Thanks for your great content, I'm glad KZbin recommended it to me by chance.
@ethangatenby2547
@ethangatenby2547 2 жыл бұрын
Steven Stalenhag made a book called ‘the electric state’ which describes a world where people are attached to VR like machines that put them in a perfect world (its illustrated, and i still think of it as the most horrifying book ive read)
@jackreid2664
@jackreid2664 2 жыл бұрын
Ive always found it interesting that we as the reader of that book (and the protagonist) never actually see what it is that makes them so addicted.
@_the_Necromancer
@_the_Necromancer Жыл бұрын
That's why I'm called the lectromancer. 😏
@trafichat
@trafichat 2 жыл бұрын
"Just play Roblox or Minecraft instead, they're just as good" Best quote from the video
@Penguin_nerd__
@Penguin_nerd__ 3 ай бұрын
When I came into the comments I thought people were going to mention that KZbin removed custom fonts or something but I couldn’t find anything about it. But the font before made this video so clickable and made the pleasure cube more mysterious and sci fi horror esc. Like it seems off putting by the concept and title/thumbnail but you can’t put your finger on it that’s what made the video so entertaining to watch. It explained why it felt uncomfortable without needing to write in the title that it was
@erixon2012
@erixon2012 2 жыл бұрын
Most people will tell you pleasure cube bad until you mention they can meet their waifu in it.
@de1ri7
@de1ri7 2 жыл бұрын
It's my fear of "the pleasure cube" that makes me such a proponent of Augmented Reality (AR). Technologies like Virtual Reality falsely simulate the pleasure and experiences that you described in the video; however, Augmented Reality can combine the speed and power of those virtual worlds but with human empathy and connection. This is because AR does not shut you into an entirely virtual world and therefore allows you to experience things more organically. I think in the future, use of the ominous (false) pleasure cube will hopefully die out and more organic, psychologically healthier technologies like AR will replace it.
@A-homo-sapien
@A-homo-sapien 2 жыл бұрын
i want this but what i also want is a real world that is filled with art and beautiful buildings ect... so when you switch it off beauty can still be found :)))
@renaigh
@renaigh 2 жыл бұрын
@@A-homo-sapien that's why I find AR more comforting, Reality is still a backdrop, still visible, to the "simulation" in front of it.
@A-homo-sapien
@A-homo-sapien 2 жыл бұрын
@@renaigh ye ye fr
@eps200
@eps200 2 жыл бұрын
The best case for AR could enhance reality. Hack our selves to see beyond the visual spectrum, hear beyond the audible range ect.
@Flyingclam
@Flyingclam 2 жыл бұрын
I think both have there place. For crafted expirences VR is amazing and I would want everyone to try it. However AR is already being used as a therapy tool for stuff like PTSD. The problem is over reliance of either and a disassociation from the real world
@KingOfTheDerp
@KingOfTheDerp 2 жыл бұрын
This is an amazing channel that seems to be addressing all of my interests!! Excellent video, we need to find solutions to the problem of continuing forward, as it is at the forefront of every problem and every day we face. I think though that the real world gives us realistic controls over our dopamine and serotonin. The infrequency and non-overload of dopamine/serotonin due to existing in the real world, dealing with the balance of emotions, etc. gives us the best experience.
@noahcunningham3166
@noahcunningham3166 2 жыл бұрын
If the pleasure cube can simulate a world that feels real to us how would someone even know the difference when they're plugged in? Similar to dreaming, sometimes we dream and we think it is the real world. If this is the case there is no difference logically.
@aloedg8058
@aloedg8058 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe were in pleasure cube and though people suffer, the real world is a polluted, radiated shithole, and were none the wiser
@sleeplessomniman5204
@sleeplessomniman5204 2 жыл бұрын
@@aloedg8058 I can guarantee that I'm not in the pleasure cube. I'd take that option in a heartbeat though.
@jasonisbored6679
@jasonisbored6679 2 жыл бұрын
that’s “the matrix” but the premise of this video is that you’re given the *option*.
@desu38
@desu38 2 жыл бұрын
@@aloedg8058 Huh, that's actually an interesting twist. What if you found out you were already in it? Would you leave?
@aloedg8058
@aloedg8058 2 жыл бұрын
@@desu38 probably cant
@rasmuswhitehorn5240
@rasmuswhitehorn5240 2 жыл бұрын
I sometimes wonder if we have already stepped into the pleasure cube, and that the reason we find the higher pleasures good is because the pleasure cube has made it so.
@potatoboy6094
@potatoboy6094 2 жыл бұрын
A good thought experiment, but one without an answer currently
@afox5319
@afox5319 2 жыл бұрын
If this is the pleasure cube, I want a refund. I SIGNED UP FOR BEING A FEMBOY FURRY FOX NOT THIS HUMAN GARBAGE THING
@ShepardJ23
@ShepardJ23 2 жыл бұрын
People voluntarily make sacrifices not for happiness, but to feel fulfilled. Fulfillment does not equal happiness.
@robotdude4377
@robotdude4377 Жыл бұрын
This video is a masterpiece in the inside thoughts and research, as well as the outside on the presentation too. It is just very well thought of. Thank you for this Britmonkey. This was the video that made me realize that you are a big deal in the youtube. oh, the pear one was too also :)
@a_rabid_raccoon
@a_rabid_raccoon 2 жыл бұрын
as an addict for the last 15 years, this whole video resonates so much with me. well done!
@ldelgg
@ldelgg 2 жыл бұрын
I hope you manage to get out of whatever addiction, this is. Wish ya luck!
@seemysight
@seemysight 2 жыл бұрын
I think the only thing that would hinders me from entering the pleasure cube is if it don’t have a clear way out. I would love. And I MEAN LOVE to be able to go into the pleasure cube for a certain hours per day.
@jackreid2664
@jackreid2664 2 жыл бұрын
I mean, if you think about it you'd love to go in for all hours a day, no matter what you say now.
@razerpenguin1887
@razerpenguin1887 2 жыл бұрын
if you were in the cube you probably wouldn't could get out. Even if you physically could get out, the amount of happiness you would get in that cube would make it near impossible for you to want to get out of the cube
@gagne6928
@gagne6928 2 жыл бұрын
I think it would make it hard to focus on normal life
@phantomwarrior8686
@phantomwarrior8686 2 жыл бұрын
You'd get addicted very quickly, pleasure is addictive, once you receive everything you want in any form, and have the experience of experience everything possible and impossible, your brain will get overestimulated very quickly and after some days discouraged.
@terminal-vl3rj
@terminal-vl3rj 2 жыл бұрын
I think one of the biggest objections to pleasure cube is that people simply like the illusion of choice and choices having meaning. Though i think huxley makes a good point about a true utopia not being eternal pleasure, his techno spiritual society can be its own type of dystopia. I think the story of the game rain world is a good example. I think if the pleasure cube is created, we will all destroy it before anyone plugs in. The aversion to it is too primal and deep. To have the illusion of choice destroyed is to die.
@s.m9206
@s.m9206 Жыл бұрын
I think what scares me more about the pleasure cube is someone or some entity using me for their own gain without me knowing it rather than the pleasure itself.
@billh.1940
@billh.1940 Жыл бұрын
They already are using you, your labor, your ideas and your money, for their purposes.
@harrybyaqussamprayuga1756
@harrybyaqussamprayuga1756 2 жыл бұрын
I refuse because that "why not" sounds threathening.
@pchris
@pchris 2 жыл бұрын
The pleasure cube wouldn't even work. We become adjusted to larger doses of these happy chemicals as we take more of them, requiring larger doses to get the same happiness, and becoming reliant on the amount we've received so far just to not be miserable. You would be happy in the pleasure cube until it could no longer provide enough dope and serotonin to keep you happy as you adjust to the amount you've been getting. It would have to keep giving you more and more until it can't supply any more. If it somehow had an infinite supply then you'd probably die long before the point that the amount it needs to give you to make you happy equals your body weight. It would be unsustainable to keep someone happy in a box forever and if they were kicked out they would become incapable of living a normal life because they would be so dependent on the chemicals they're no longer receiving. People kicked out of the pleasure box would become the most depressed people in the world. Edit: I’m very aware it’s “like a drug” and my entire argument revolves around that fact.
@potatoboy6094
@potatoboy6094 2 жыл бұрын
It is a drug
@pchris
@pchris 2 жыл бұрын
@M T I don’t get it. That’s what I said over and over in my comment. Dope is a drug. And our bodies adapt to them. If you were to inject a shit ton of dope it would make you really happy. If you did it every single day for the rest of your life the happiness you would get from it would diminish with each day until you no longer feel happy when you inject this shit ton of dope. But then if you just suddenly _stop_ taking the drugs then you will feel extremely depressed until you start taking them again and will need the shit ton of drugs just to feel normal. This is why antidepressants can start to show diminishing effects until you’re depressed again. But you can’t just stop taking them because that would make things worse.
@pchris
@pchris 2 жыл бұрын
@@potatoboy6094 see my reply to @M T ‘s comment
@cosmic5934
@cosmic5934 2 жыл бұрын
this is kinda what i was thinking, you would eventually reach a point that you can no longer receive enough dopamine to make you satisfied anymore - you would get bored of the pleasure cube, somehow?
@fiona9891
@fiona9891 2 жыл бұрын
what if it worked by modifying your brain to remove that adaptation though?
@annic5878
@annic5878 2 жыл бұрын
This video is amazing and exactly captures my thoughts (and most of other people’s). This video is especially important because of “Great reset” arguments happening. Keep up the good work bro.
@datferretguy
@datferretguy 8 ай бұрын
I love the assemblance-esque distortion when you say "we want to do things, not just have the experience of doing it" Fits perfect. Great video
@pulsarhappy7514
@pulsarhappy7514 2 жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure people underestimate the pleasure cube. If it really triggers seretonin and all pleasure chemicals, then we probably don't have any idea how good and consistent this must feel. I'd be ready to bet most people (probably including me) would get hooked on the thing instantly and never regret going into it.
@jackreid2664
@jackreid2664 2 жыл бұрын
yeah
@fellinuxvi3541
@fellinuxvi3541 Жыл бұрын
That's exactly what's terrifying about it.
@SomeGuy-so3kk
@SomeGuy-so3kk Жыл бұрын
The age of deconstruction which produced the people who would be fine with such a fate is to be maligned by those with any soul left to speak of. I was happier as a child but I'd not want to go back to that since I'm a better person now. To be the happiest person is not my goal to be the best person I can be is. Please reasses what it is you people want in life and if it truly is this then heroin is there for you. It'll end you but you will have achieved your pleaaure cube if only for a short time.
@pulsarhappy7514
@pulsarhappy7514 Жыл бұрын
@@SomeGuy-so3kk You would be a fool if you thought people from an ancient time would be impervious to the pleasure cube. People in the past only had less access to pleasure, but they sought after it in the same exact way. They had a harder time being alive, because life was harder, but put them in a pleasure cube and they would stay in it. There is no such thing as a deconstruction age, what happened is just machines are doing all our chores for us, but every human being would fall victim to the pleasure cube.
@SomeGuy-so3kk
@SomeGuy-so3kk Жыл бұрын
@@pulsarhappy7514 I never said that ancient people would be impervious nor that people in the recent past would. Simply that an attitude which would facilitate the use of this and not turn their head up at the concept is a symptom of this very real age of deconstruction. Everything down to the very concepts of men and women existing is being deconstructed and its quite sad to witness at times. And of course no one would leave the pleasure cube. Hardly anyone every really quits heroin. The mark of ones character is whether or not they'd choose to enter such a damned thing in the first place. I don't fault the heroin addict for being unable to quit I fault him for his choice to begin the use of such a thing in the first place.
@Yoobster
@Yoobster 2 жыл бұрын
TLDR: "we cant get the full enjoyment unless we work hard to get it" or: "what id it was the friends we made along the way?"
@Simons_Valere
@Simons_Valere 2 жыл бұрын
Well if something like the cube gets invented, wouldn't it just be a slow and relaxing way of natural selection?
@caninec1836
@caninec1836 Жыл бұрын
this essentially boils down to a discussion about drugs, and many junkies are already in their pleasure cube. some just like it
@renaigh
@renaigh 2 жыл бұрын
more people find pleasure from watching others succeed, then actually achieving that goal themselves.
@CyborusYT
@CyborusYT 2 жыл бұрын
"How people are in videos games rarely react how they are in real life" Yes, I am, in fact, *not* a hyper-advanced octopus girl
@blaster2000
@blaster2000 Жыл бұрын
I don't break trees with my fist
@prestige_rusher_3500
@prestige_rusher_3500 Жыл бұрын
yes i'm not a pickaxe
@Myname-cb9ru
@Myname-cb9ru 2 жыл бұрын
I think people Confuse pleasure and happiness. One can be in a state of pleasure and still not be happy.
@terryscott524
@terryscott524 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure that the pleasure cube would accommodate for any of these potential pitfalls. If it didn't, it wouldn't be a pleasure cube.
@idha39
@idha39 2 жыл бұрын
I like how minecraft is the example of ''eternal bliss''
@neyoid
@neyoid 2 жыл бұрын
Part of being human is feeling emotion. Good and bad. Feeling constant pleasure reduces you to nothing. It doesn't matter if it's a vegetizer or a simulation. Humans, in order to be human, need negative emotions.
@charmlesscomic1353
@charmlesscomic1353 2 жыл бұрын
I just found this channel and im so glad i did. The videos are so well thought out and creative. Kudos to you!
@URAYULI
@URAYULI 2 жыл бұрын
I would kill for this to be real. To not ever have to deal with challenge or hardship ever again. To not have to have a personality or friends, to never worry about loss or happiness or fulfillment, to just be able to live in a state of mindless bliss until I die. I wish that this could happen to me. I hate being alive.
@TheWandererOfDreams
@TheWandererOfDreams Жыл бұрын
I understand.
@benoit843
@benoit843 2 жыл бұрын
Your level of editing and story telling is just insane ! Thanks for your work, it's rare to find videos of such quality on youtube this days...
@crispybag3329
@crispybag3329 2 жыл бұрын
Relly fun channel! Witty humour, great writing, and healthy perspectives on certain concepts! What I think is the most special about this channel though is how healthy the comments are and how it doesn't belittle the video if they disagree with the video, or mindlessly praise it. Keep up the good work :)
@iustinprisacaru225
@iustinprisacaru225 Жыл бұрын
There was a German writer (I can't remember his name but I remember his quote) that said: "Only the sad people know what happiness is".
@lukewatson8848
@lukewatson8848 2 жыл бұрын
To me, the most terrifying part about this concept is that however adament one is to not want to be part of the "pleause cube", if they're placed in it they would have no care to leave, they wouldn't be able to because they wouldn't *want* to. even still, if the cube worked as it did in the comic, trying to take someone out of the cube would cause them extreme depression, or at worst kill them.
@justas6235
@justas6235 2 жыл бұрын
I cannot stop watching your "The Rise and Fall of New Labour", I just turn it on once a week and watch it again. I don't recall ever finding such an interesting video on a transformation of a political party. Your videos are awesome, the stop being a climate nihilist and the anti car one are very well made, but the labour one is just peak content. The part from 8:16 10:05 is just so well made, the music out of this world. I never cared about British politics, but now I literally ask all british people I know what they think of Tony Blair's laws. And I was also wondering whether you could make a video on Thatcher. Why for some she is an iron lady and for some a gender neutral bathroom .Love your content, you're the only channel where I have the subscription bell actually activated for every video.
@aerosma5021
@aerosma5021 2 жыл бұрын
Whatever type of happiness concoction your brain can come up with, the pleasure cube can do better. A machine specifically designed to make you "feel good" I assume should be able to simulate any form of happiness. So the same feeling of "happiness of life / not taking happiness for granted / cherishing happiness" can also be simulated in the pleasure cube which is funny, but not surprising if you think about it.
@jackreid2664
@jackreid2664 2 жыл бұрын
Yes. I dont see why such an advanced civilisation could not just make people artificially fulfilled as well.
@winzyl9546
@winzyl9546 2 жыл бұрын
The cube hijacks the brain, theres no way you can say the cube is bad once you get plugged in. Its a perfect dream that you would never get bored of. If you want love or identity then the cube will simulate that, if you want hard work to achieve higher pleasure then why not, but unlike the real world the cube will make sure you achieve happiness.
@ogsharkey3305
@ogsharkey3305 2 жыл бұрын
The differentiation of higher pleasure & lower pleasure is something I DEFINITELY needed to understand, such simple terminology for pleasure for the ego vs pleasure for the soul!
@lithostheory
@lithostheory 2 жыл бұрын
I might be in the minority in saying that this pleasure cube doesn't seem so horrifying? Most worries about the cube will fade away when you experience the cube.
@jackreid2664
@jackreid2664 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, as much as I say I'd hate it, as much as anyone would say that they'd hate it, we will love it. Upon the altar of eternal bliss any qualms or worries will be left behind. It's similar to heaven, something that most people aren't afraid of.
@cloudynguyen6527
@cloudynguyen6527 2 жыл бұрын
When you understand how dopamine work, you'll understand why people can't quit drug, alcohol or smoking. This cube will convince you to be part of it. When the cube is broken, you will be in the state of confused and fear. You will crave for that high dopamine the cube is giving. It's sad that in life we have tons of bullshit. But like everyone else in the comments have already said. The happiness is like the light. When there is too much like, you can't see shit. Sometimes we just need a shade of dark, like sadness, to see where the light is appreciate at. About heaven, I personally think heaven represents your resting after finishing a task, in particular, you finish all the good deeds in life. This is how dopamine work. You are rewarded after completing a task. Heaven is the reward after you do a good deed to yourself and mankind. You still experience your life from start to finish. You still have identity of who you are to justify why should you be in heaven.
@quickcube2834
@quickcube2834 2 жыл бұрын
@@cloudynguyen6527 yeah too much is maby a problem but a less Strong Form can Improve our lifes so much
@potatoboy6094
@potatoboy6094 2 жыл бұрын
Of course it will feel great, it’s hijacking our brains to feel good, abusing our chemistry for eternal bliss, that’s not the point, the same point about it: “feeling good once you’re in it” could literally be said about anything, ever heard of Stockholm syndrome? Just cuz it feels good doesn’t mean it is, you might feel like heaven, but you’re really just rotting away in a claustrophobic cube, if you’re really willing to throw your chance to experince things, to do something only a few could ever claim to have done, for some cheap and quick chemically induced happiness, I recommend ecstasy, not that I’ve ever tried it myself, but it’s apparently what you’re looking for, but I realized a long time ago that the destination is not why it’s worth living, but the journey to get there that makes things fulfilling, and of course I don’t know you and your life and this might not be your actual viewpoint, but from where I’m standing, anybody who is willing to take being in a simulation for their whole life over true experience(or true as far as anyone can prove), must not be doing so hot in the life they were given
@fatimafarid8066
@fatimafarid8066 2 жыл бұрын
@@jackreid2664 this is why 11 year old me decided I don't want to go to heaven. I wish I was kidding. It's so fucking funny
@dissonanceparadiddle
@dissonanceparadiddle 2 жыл бұрын
I like how batman beyond showed that this would eventually kill you.
@ItsArtyTheFox
@ItsArtyTheFox 2 жыл бұрын
This will likely never be seen by ya, but I just want to mention that your channel is basically the musings of philosophy. That makes you a philosopher :) congrats
@SurrealCrab
@SurrealCrab Жыл бұрын
Its like the realizing of the concept of heaven as a real place, and the fact that such a concept is uncomfortable is, in and of itself, very much uncomfortable.
@Haispawner
@Haispawner 2 жыл бұрын
The comic is oddly similar to Scythelord's "Wireframe" a death metal song about very similar themes. Shoutouts to Vinesauce Jonttelflips.
@__-cx6lg
@__-cx6lg 2 жыл бұрын
Here's how I look at it: Happiness is a signal I tend to get in my brain when things I value happen. Of course, it's not a perfect signal; there's not a perfect one-to-one correspondence between what I value and the feeling of happiness, not at all. And mind-altering technology could almost entirely sever the connection between happiness and value entirely. I prefer both having the experience of happiness, AND the things that happiness should be a signal for. That's what I want - not just a light flashing "everything is okay", but also for everything to be okay. (It's the same thing with suffering: I _both_ want to not experience much suffering, _and_ I don't want someone to cut my arms off - the signal and the thing it's signalling are different, and I want to avoid both. The humans in the comic are like people who can't feel pain - their signal got broken, and is no longer doing the thing they want it to do.) I want love _and_ the feeling of love; friendship _and_ the feeling of friendship; adventure _and_ the feeling of adventure! And that's all there is to it! I don't need any more philosophical justification than that, dammit! My preferences include, _but extend beyond,_ the state of my brain. That's just want my brain is designed to want, no further justification needed! Anyone who would not prefer that comic to come true feels the same way - they have preferences for how the universe _actually is_ outside of their brain. ( Or put another way, to borrow one of my favorite econ concepts, we want to avoid Goodhart's trap: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodhart%27s_law. Happiness and the things you care about are correlated - but if all you do is focus on maximizing happiness, *you'll break the correlation!* )
@jobeduckworth5430
@jobeduckworth5430 Жыл бұрын
Been watching for a good hour now, did not expect to find such good quality information and such a good channel. Fairplay this is good good content opening more minds.
@sacaruma
@sacaruma 9 ай бұрын
Personally i think that the problem starts with the assumption that happines is the end goal we seek, happinness in itself is a fleeting thing, what people trully want is fullfilment and purpose, thats why the concept of the pleasure cube feels wrong as it strips you away of those things. i find the concept quite interesting because it reveals a flaw in a very common way of looking at life.
@jontedeakin1986
@jontedeakin1986 2 жыл бұрын
You have to ask "why do i want to achieve things in the real world". You do it for the sense of satisfaction, that sense itself could be injected into you in the cube.
@jackreid2664
@jackreid2664 2 жыл бұрын
exactly
@vermin5367
@vermin5367 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the stimulations of gratification would have to be considered in order to keep it a well functioning pleasure cube. Otherwise intense psychosis would develop from rusty paradoxes within the simulation.
@GaiaGoddessOfTheEarth
@GaiaGoddessOfTheEarth 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who's struggled with depression for most of my life the pleasure cube is functionally equivalent to suicide. I disappear from the outside world in both situations and in one I'm forever happy while the other I'm forever nothing.
@Tom_Bee_
@Tom_Bee_ 2 жыл бұрын
Dentistry was a strange example given how much work is done to try and minimize the suffering lol
@martakoakowska9872
@martakoakowska9872 Жыл бұрын
As a person with 5-year-long-and-still-going, treatment resistant depression, the vision of infinite pleasure chemicals intake doesn’t actually sound anyhow like a bad thing
@ketmax2805
@ketmax2805 2 жыл бұрын
This channel doubled in subscribers in such a short period. You deserve it!
@Thrall079
@Thrall079 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah it's really blowing up right now, and it's not from any of his new videos instantly being successful, so the algorithm must've blessed him lol
@Shibasu_
@Shibasu_ 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic Video! I have been thinking about this topic for quite a while and you gave some very good answers.
@samfranklin4188
@samfranklin4188 Жыл бұрын
Our phones are pretty analogous to the pleasure cube in a lot of ways. Instant dopamine whenever
@themasculinismmovement
@themasculinismmovement 9 ай бұрын
I turned my apartment into a pleasure cube this past winter. I spent the entire season doing a variety of drugs, lifting weights, listening to my favorite tunes, watching TV & movies, eating about 5 flavorful meals a day, taking naps, and finding other ways to create pleasure. Basically I was spending all day every day farming dopamine and seratonin. Most of each day felt awesome. But every day began with a terrible low, and there were other awful intermittent lows as well. As soon as the season was over and I could start leaving the house and doing stuff without getting cold, I gave up that lifestyle to do so, and I didn't miss it one bit. The pleasure cube may be full of pleasure, but its boring.
@MatthewCobalt
@MatthewCobalt 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly, I think the main thing I took away from this was the Moderation and Freedom is Key. You can hate what I say, but you have to admit, sometimes we all just have to leave the tedium of everyday life. Not to say I want the pleasure cube, I hope that concept is set on fire and have it's ashes sent to the sun. No, what I'm personally aiming for is specifically a balanced form of "Rebirth Escapism", where one can willingly spend a defined (aka limited) period of time as a new person starting from the ground up with what they know in real life. I know that this concept still has many drawbacks, as this will most likely lead to self-inflicted heavy isolation on introverst who don't put value on their real life. But I am at least hoping that a community of open social interation would form around this idea.
@bigfatpandalaktana2747
@bigfatpandalaktana2747 2 жыл бұрын
What if instead we made a "pain cube" which would obviously have you experience pain and made it societally honourable to endure?
@Rikri
@Rikri 2 жыл бұрын
As far as I'm aware, many cultures already do similar stuff. I wouldn't be surprised if this actually happened in the future.
@ergwertgesrthehwehwejwe
@ergwertgesrthehwehwejwe 2 жыл бұрын
how about an amogus cube you perpetually play among us in it
@bigfatpandalaktana2747
@bigfatpandalaktana2747 2 жыл бұрын
@@ergwertgesrthehwehwejwe that's the same as a pain cube
@DirtyPhlegm
@DirtyPhlegm 2 жыл бұрын
Yes imagine building a literal hell. Tbh it's the thing I fear most from our future
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