Togusa (
standalonehuman) wrote in
retrospec2017-10-03 03:45 pm
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Lingering Worries
Hitori Togusa
10/2 near Recolle Police StationI've got a question, and I don't mean for it to scare people, because what I'm really looking for is proof that I'm wrong.
If these other people, the ones Retrospec is giving us the memories of? Retrospec is also slowly giving us their bodies. A piece at a time, it seems.
What if they were sick? Is it slowly going to happen to us, too?
How can we help each other out if it does start happening?
So that I'm not wasting everybody's time with this, though. I've been asking about Dr. James Halliday, a memory researcher a bunch of us came across the name of in August. Despite the fact that Retrospec seems to have been interested in his work, I don't think they're using it.
It specialized in deep-brain stimulation, but I personally had a check done to see if there were any changes to my brain from being on the app for eight months now, and there's nothing.
Just so we can rule that one out.
Re: [voice]
Well. He can think of a couple reasons this Other Matt would be considered "a special" individual.
"That brings us back to the subject of unusual abilities. This Other Matt had talents I still don't fully understand but valuable skills nonetheless in the right circumstances. Retrospec has chosen a large number of users with super powers and other dangerous skills."
Re: [voice]
His eyes close, and he is thinking back over what Matt has said, and the words come out suddenly, "What kind of talents?" That might be the important part. "And how dangerous? You think you're going to be okay if they suddenly pop up?"
Re: [voice]
"I think he's blind like I am. The memories don't look like a world seen with eyesight. He doesn't see color or the writing on signs. But he still sees somehow. He must have some kind of unnatural power. From an alleyway he sees the couple walking together half a block away. He knows there's what the man in the building he's standing next to is listening to on the radio and that there are rats crawling in the walls and pigeons sleeping on the roof. Every memory is an overwhelming flood of information."
Re: [voice]
"But I'll admit I wondered what the world looked like to him. How could a machine simulate everything the brain does for us to see? Would it be even sharper vision in some ways, but missing information in others?" The suggestion Togusa is making is too clear to point out.
Re: [voice]
Re: [voice]
"Maybe it isn't mechanical. Maybe any machine has to still work off of whatever organic component is left." Togusa ponders. "As you said, if the wire is cut, how much vision would be able to be restored in your case?"
Re: [voice]