Oh shit, I shouldn't have messed around with my mind so much. I forgot where I put my sense of morality. Let this be a warning to all of you. *goes on a murderspree*
No, not really. I still understand and remember what my system of morality was, and I trust my old self enough to go with what he decided, but I don't feel a sense of right and wrong. For instance, why do people matter? Is injustice bad? Is discrimination bad? How is that so? I feel like I'm apart from everything - the rocks, the stars are not "right" or "wrong", they just are. "Right" is just whatever somebody says is right, and "wrong" is whatever somebody says is wrong. How is my morality any better or worse than anybody else's?
I suppose I should take this over to the Philosophy thread though, so as to not derail this one. But I do have a question - have you ever done anything like this, Sergarr or anybody else?
I, uh, don't quite remember doing something as radical as that.
I do remember being severely disappointed in existent morality-like things, until I've slowly recovered my belief in their, uh, goodness?, through some, uh, evolutionary/physical arguments like "if it wasn't effective, then why there are no societies without them", and also when I've found out that a significant portion on them could be potentially simplified to a single axiom of "keep the apparent variety sort of close to maximum or at least going upwards most of the time, then the apparent variety of variety itself so that there are both systems with more and less "maximum variation" existing, then the apparent variety of variety of variety... all the way up", which has an obvious physical-based justification, as it is usually the most diverse systems that are the most survivable, and the most interesting to look at, too, and it feels like such a system would be hella diverse.
Seems to avoid most of the usual "utopia" pitfalls by making it partially deny its previous iteration on every new step, as well.