LINES

They were all very snowy.
There was no way to find him. The commissioner came to us and asked us if we could create a program to find him.

To begin with, we set out to create a space in which to bring the data together. We had to be able to divide between good and evil. We did that first division by simulating the law, but that separation generated a lot of doubts in the team. There were other ways of understanding right and wrong.

We've added another function simulating religion. It was very similar to that of the law, but not the same. We crossed them between them and the first indeterminate spaces appeared. Those spaces contained good and evil at the same time.

With slight variations, we are able to simulate other systems of laws and other religions. Indeterminate spaces began to multiply. The zone of evil was getting smaller and smaller, but the data was still not enough. We needed to gain a lot more space from evil.

That's why we programmed a new function simulating the morals of each individual. The individual function. It turned out to be totally independent of the functions of laws and religions. He was able to get through them all.

And we're still on that path. We managed to ensure that each individual had his or her own individual function, going in and out of the rest of the laws, religions and moral convictions.

For the first time, we had the feeling that we could interpret behaviors similar to need or ambition and that encouraged us a lot. The area in which such a person could move began to get smaller.

Some of those values were more extreme. They gave unpredictable results.

The program generated an enormous, immense amount of values. It was very difficult to read and represent, but in the end, we began to see the limits of everything.

That's how we discovered these places, empty like black holes. Areas in which that man moved, beyond the lines of evil that no one should ever cross.

Thanks for coming.

© illot 2020