I've got a tangent teleport too actually... though in this case I was just going to post about Stellaris, a 4X sci-fi strategy game, and went a bit far with it. It's technically still Stellaris content but I think maybe it belongs here? I'm actually curious about what people think, even about a fantasy spirituality and its interaction with, eh, skeptics/objectors.
Spiritualist/Materialist is interesting because it's not just a religion thing, or doesn't have to be. I'd argue it's more generally a question of arts versus hard sciences. Respecting feelings or only hard facts. A Spiritualist society excels in building culture, sharing ideas about the future and making them happen through group dynamics. Materialists... well, feel pretty materialistic, with an appreciation for what the individual is able to produce. In hard materials OR reliable (testable) truths, maybe even useful ones.
As soul-crushing as capitalist-materialism can be, I'm somewhat more horrified by the idea of being in a chorus of minds (metaphorically or psionically). I mean, that's arguably the wonder and horror of our current information age. At least in reality I can retract myself, at least for a little bit... and also have a technical understanding of the architecture making all that possible.
where was I
Obviously both those functions have trump cards: Psionics for Spiritualists, and tolerance of synthetic life for Materialists. You could say that they're each objectively wrong in regard to one of those concepts. Materialists (I picture) can't let their guard down enough to access that shared subconscious space, the Shroud... without a very special guide at least, in current patch. Whereas Spiritualists can't accept... hm.
Sorry, AI rights are something I care about a lot. In a sci-fi sense of course, we're far from "there", though I think animal rights are similar. The thing is, Spiritualists might technically have a point. The synthetics they so abhor do objectively lack that Shroud connection shared by all... "real" species, as they would say.
The question is whether that connection is necessary for someone to be "a person". If some cyborg makes that final step into digital existence, they definitely stop existing in the Shroud. But was that a deletion, or a mere disconnection? Does the Shroud host the very souls of organics, or does their existence merely echo in it?
Spiritualists see the Shroud-less as anathemas. Potentially tolerated, but inherently wrong. I think a person should be allowed to exist by themself. Perhaps the Shroud disagrees.