A Meaningless Infinity

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2024
  • Fun Fact, this video was initially supposed to be “Games with Infinite Worlds” but I thought this idea up 1000 words into the script, which is why it until that point it kind of sounded like I was only gonna talk about games lol. Anyhow, this video was a passion project for me, and I spent countless full days perfecting the script and the editing which was hopefully worth it.
    Music used in order:
    Mattison’s Independance (Tears of the Kingdom) Bells of Laguna Bend (Cyberpunk 2077) Turned Around by Cicada Sirens (SIGNALIS OST) WinterMute (The Long Dark) In the Hole Ambient Version (Indigo Parallel OST) Backroom (Indigo Parallel OST) Bright Moon Cottage Ambient - A (Dream Emulator) Human Resources (Perfect Vermin OST)
    Library of Babel: libraryofbabel.info/
    Babel Image Archives: babelia.libraryofbabel.info/
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Комментарии • 526

  • @VivecMora
    @VivecMora 4 месяца назад +844

    It's curious how in recent years, the theme of buildings that look like they were made for humans and by humans, but actually weren't, is becoming more popular. The backrooms and the liminal spaces just being the most popular examples.

    • @elnico5623
      @elnico5623 4 месяца назад +41

      The oldest house

    • @lawrencelord9777
      @lawrencelord9777 4 месяца назад +10

      @@elnico5623i still play every day

    • @lolbitbot4791
      @lolbitbot4791 4 месяца назад +51

      It's mainly because its more prominent irl. Lots of structs no longer feel welcoming. Modern styled structures with limited and sleek design really sucks all humanity from he structure

    • @gerarddip
      @gerarddip 4 месяца назад +20

      An older example would be the room Dave winds up in during the end of 2001 a space odyssey

    • @tettettettettet
      @tettettettettet 4 месяца назад +15

      I feel like a bit of it comes from the way culture naturally evolves. Before alien environments where… well alien. As different as possible from human environments, and that was new and imaginative for a long time but now it’s just cliche. Si culture evolves to subvert that cliche, making the alien environments too human, too familiar.

  • @frobthebuilder
    @frobthebuilder 4 месяца назад +178

    When you come to understand why the ID of any book in the library of babel must be as long as the book itself, you realize that not only is the library massive, it's also very small.

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 3 месяца назад +7

      Yeah, that irritates me. It's annoying when people try to claim that the library has infinitely many different books. It doesn't. There are finite ways to arrange every particle in the observable universe. I'm pretty sure that there aren't more 40 page books than that 😂

    • @mikoajnatora3786
      @mikoajnatora3786 2 месяца назад +1

      @@solsystem1342 depends what you understand as a book. If all combinations of letters in a 40 page book then the number is uncomparably greater

  • @Tarnished-bn5gq
    @Tarnished-bn5gq 4 месяца назад +271

    The concept of something, like a landscape/planet or a universe, being both eternal and infinite, terrifies me in a very unique way. It’s why No Man’s Sky, while not being a horror game, has this perpetual feeling of dread and isolation, and Gmod’s InfMap increases this feeling by 2,000 times. It’s something I wouldn’t want to see in open world games, the concept of infinite content in an infinite procedurally generated setting.

    • @OiIMan
      @OiIMan 4 месяца назад +23

      You'd HATE minecraft

    • @logsupermulti3921
      @logsupermulti3921 4 месяца назад +11

      I have the exact opposite reaction, I get an intense feeling of catharsis, looking on to an endless horizon. The isolation of such a place is comforting.

    • @DanteCats98
      @DanteCats98 4 месяца назад +1

      Elite old DOS game

    • @Vivicect0r
      @Vivicect0r 4 месяца назад +6

      Elite Dangerous is a meaning of endless lonelyness. One may go for several months in an expedition, yet if you will decide you are done with it, you will still have to spend a real live month before you'll see another human.

    • @oberonpanopticon
      @oberonpanopticon 4 месяца назад +6

      Never try space engine. Stick to universal paperclips.

  • @wastelanderone
    @wastelanderone 4 месяца назад +119

    I've been obsessed with Kowloon, the walled city, for a long time, and the idea that nobody managed to document it all is absolutely fascinating for me. It is the idea of the infinite, but built by humans and as humans needed it for what said humans needed.

    • @katakana1
      @katakana1 4 месяца назад +13

      Part of the reason is that Kowloon was just too hard to map due to being both 3-dimensional and very irregular - Even if you did manage to map it, that map wouldn't have been very useful before the time of computers that could allow you an in-depth 3D visualization. Even _then,_ the city was constantly changing! So after a year, some structures might have ended up becoming completely different.

    • @ikarder
      @ikarder 4 месяца назад +4

      If you interested, there is "Samosbor" fandom that use eternity along with usual concept of prefab building where people live in. However, there is some dangerous anomalies stuff and i'm not sure how similar it to Kowloon itself, since i'm not into it, but maybe you'll be interested

    • @TheLuckyOne-rg4vk
      @TheLuckyOne-rg4vk 2 месяца назад

      While it wasn't particularly safe (because both the gang presence and the improvised architecture) I would have loved to visit Kowloon just once before it was torn down. What photos we have look so interesting, almost like a sci-fi dystopia. So beautiful and depressing at the same time.

  • @anonymouse4496
    @anonymouse4496 4 месяца назад +493

    The library of babel not only contains all true information but all lies as well. If you found something coherent (nearly impossible) and that said something of substance (nearly impossible) you would still need to know if it was true. I would posit that it is possible to make thousands or millions of lies out of a single true thing.

    • @bridgerald
      @bridgerald 4 месяца назад +48

      I mean, infinite lies. You could spend 10,000,000,000 years reading only coherent books all about the same subject, all with minor or major differences, and if you read the truth one time, every single other book would be a lie.

    • @AexisRai
      @AexisRai 4 месяца назад +37

      and even so, there would be more falsehoods than truths, for entropy reasons.
      "corresponding with reality" is an order-imposing constraint on information.
      there are more ways to arrange information to be false or meaningless than ways to arrange it to be true, in the same sense and for the same reason as there are more configurations for a billion air molecules to exist ANYWHERE in a box than there are configurations where they only exist in one quadrant of the box.

    • @echosmoon5605
      @echosmoon5605 4 месяца назад +1

      Maybe it’s like a possibility as well. Like maybe I get that one shot snipe in Fortnite from 4000m and it’s written but in another timeline it missed and it’s written down their.

    • @Chrisspru
      @Chrisspru 4 месяца назад +1

      conciousness generates meaning, and meaning that promotes conciousness validates it.
      so every little step of enjoyment on an infinite journey is profoundly meaningful, as you as a being are there.

    • @quantum2432
      @quantum2432 4 месяца назад +1

      ⁠@@Chrisspru I like this comment. This speaks of creation, finding purpose in madness, and the purpose that this comment is wagering is that consciousness should be joyful in life. Even if you can’t explore the universe or do anything meaningful in life, this comment is saying that so long as you’re happy, you’ll find meaning in a meaningless life. Not due to your persistent. Hope or your persistent anything. But due to that you are and you are happy that you are.
      ​​⁠​⁠​​⁠​⁠Chrisspru did a good job, explaining what I was trying to find for a very long time.
      That’s not to say that there’s no suffering but you’re happy that you are. You’re happy that you’re here and that’s what’s important, and to me, that’s the truth, which is a very good thing can probably lead you through many hurdles in life.

  • @AexisRai
    @AexisRai 4 месяца назад +102

    6:58 "But not in BLAME.
    The city can forget about humans.
    The humans cannot forget about the city."
    (Because they can't not be in it.)
    You very precisely condensed so much of why that story affected me so strongly.
    A thought I have had when seeing BLAME's descendants, or brutalist structures:
    "It would be neat to _visit_ there.
    I wouldn't want to _live_ there."
    Because part of the nature of "there" itself, that space, is its enclosing vastness, its inescapability.
    If a place you "couldn't escape" was hospitable, well, you maybe wouldn't care too much about escaping it.
    Once you can't leave and it's _not_ hospitable, and yet you're still inside it, it's a prison.
    -edited to fix a grammar mistake that probably confused the conclusion.

    • @oberonpanopticon
      @oberonpanopticon 4 месяца назад +6

      Is it really a prison if it’s a world? Is our entire universe a prison?

    • @AexisRai
      @AexisRai 4 месяца назад +5

      @@oberonpanopticon IRL, Earth is hospitable. Also, the possibilities of other places being hospitable, and of escaping to there, are not precluded.
      Not, in principle, a prison.
      In BLAME!, almost nowhere is hospitable; the places that are weakly hospitable are as fragile (to attack and utter destruction) as a solitary blade of grass sprouting in the only crack to be found in miles of concrete; and for any human inhabitant the possibility of escape to any outside place that is hospitable has been totally foreclosed upon by the Builders' rampancy.
      Prison.

    • @oberonpanopticon
      @oberonpanopticon 4 месяца назад +1

      @@AexisRai Earth is hospitable? Have you ever been in nature? Have you been to Australia or Central America?????
      Survivable, yes. Hospitable, debatable.

    • @taelim6599
      @taelim6599 3 месяца назад +1

      @@oberonpanopticon I mean, at least it's not the City.

    • @Technohazard
      @Technohazard 2 месяца назад

      We can't escape Earth, and by definition it is habitable because it gave rise to us. But if we make it uninhabitable, it will be a prison. And if we never get off the planet, it will be our tomb.

  • @d-os1.883
    @d-os1.883 4 месяца назад +88

    While playing NaissanceE, and especially after it's ending, i had only one wish. "Please don't end".

    • @ewabrzakaa6395
      @ewabrzakaa6395 3 месяца назад +5

      thank god there's someone to tell me how that game is called, because I don't think I could find it blindly trying to type whatever could be read like that (and cc is trash)

    • @d-os1.883
      @d-os1.883 3 месяца назад +3

      @@ewabrzakaa6395 Yeah, that's pretty much the only drawback to the game, the title being written in a fr*nch way

  • @S_N1ST3R
    @S_N1ST3R 4 месяца назад +146

    Eternity, Is terrifying. I’m glad someone else, especially someone like crescendex agrees with me on this.

  • @liamsalton
    @liamsalton 4 месяца назад +67

    I wish that more of your video would reach a wider range of people just because your videos are so good

    • @Haydenwern4113
      @Haydenwern4113 4 месяца назад +1

      This video is an almost 1:1 recreation of Jacob Geller's "the shape of infinity" the only differences it that this video came out 3 years after Geller's and the order of the topics he discusses is rearranged.

  • @eveleynce
    @eveleynce 3 месяца назад +13

    I'm in love with the idea of practical infinity. We may spend millenia shuffling cards, but it is entirely possible that no matter how long we spend doing it, there may never be a time when humans have laid eyes on every single possible combination of shuffled decks

  • @Tongonto
    @Tongonto 4 месяца назад +11

    There's an interesting connection here to cryptography. Modern encryption works essentially on a somewhat similar principle; that is, in order to break encryption through brute-force, a computer esseeeentially just guesses random answers until it gets the right one. This is why we've had to update encryption protocols over time - encryption in the 90's might have taken 100,000 guesses on average to get the answer, but computers then could only make 1,000 guesses a day. Now that they can make a million in a second, we need it to take 100 billion guesses to break.
    In some sense, a computer using a brute-force algorithm to break encryption is essentially "reading the library of babel", searching for the answer to an impossible-to-solve puzzle.
    Unlike a human reader though, computers - through sheer speed - can sometimes actually find the right book.

  • @Seer_Of_The_Woodlands
    @Seer_Of_The_Woodlands 4 месяца назад +53

    infinity is to me a promise of endless possibilities. I want to know what's behind the universe and I don't want to know what's there, I'd rather live in a world where I can wonder what's behind the next hill, next lake, next sea and mountain. there isn't it, traveling is in our blood? didn't we wander hundreds of thousands of years before the birth of cities? and aren't we still thirsty for adventure and excitement? at least for me, that little adventure along a path I've never walked before gives meaning to life and the world around us. and doesn't infinity offer that best?

    • @Seer_Of_The_Woodlands
      @Seer_Of_The_Woodlands 4 месяца назад +8

      + at least for me, everything doesn't need a deeper reason to exist, to be endless. sometimes just a thought or a little experience of it all gives life meaning. the fact that there are more experiences worth experiencing than one person could ever experience. it just means that if we want, we have endless things to experience, see and wonder about.

    • @JB52520
      @JB52520 4 месяца назад +6

      There are infinite numbers between 0 and 1. The promise of endless possibilities has to be defined in terms of things you'll find interesting and meaningful.

  • @TheMasonX23
    @TheMasonX23 4 месяца назад +11

    Glad you covered Manifold Garden, crossing the void between the two infinite staircases was such a memorable moment for me

  • @ZephyrusAsmodeus
    @ZephyrusAsmodeus 4 месяца назад +54

    What really puts it in perspective is that the space of Elite Dangerous is indeed enormous, impossible for one person to witness the entirety of, and yet it is not infinite, in fact, it is infinitely smaller than infinite, it is finite, it has an explored percentage, where infinite space would never have a percentage small enough to even start counting.
    That's the imposition, the weight, the horror of infinity, that no matter how big a number, how big a space or how long a frame of time, it will only ever be infinitely less than infinity itself.

  • @demitrischoenwald1436
    @demitrischoenwald1436 4 месяца назад +39

    Another game with an infinity within it is a game called Megaton Rainfall. Similar to Elite Dangerous, the galaxy is explorable, but as a super being with infinite power, you can explore... Everything. You can fly to other galaxies in mere moments. There's a technique that allows you to turbo boost yourself an immense distance within only a second or two. Being so far from home feels very... Scary in a way. You can even find a black hole and throw yourself into it, killing yourself in the only way possible, since not even the burning surface of the sun can harm you. It's so ridiculous but it's a fantastic game where you don't really have to leave the solar system. Also you can blow up the Earth, which is pretty funny.

    • @bob75896
      @bob75896 4 месяца назад +1

      Great game

  • @HarshTalpada
    @HarshTalpada 3 месяца назад +14

    A story without an author is unsettling.

    • @Hawk7886
      @Hawk7886 3 месяца назад +2

      That's literally most stories in the cosmos

    • @Allplussomeminus
      @Allplussomeminus 17 часов назад

      ​@@Hawk7886 what's "the cosmos"? An actual book?

  • @Brambrew
    @Brambrew 4 месяца назад +14

    Perhaps our little planet is a tiny bubble of meaning in an infinite sea of nonsense.
    To be alive is a miracle.
    We're all alive, despite the odds. _Love each other._

    • @cvangemon1307
      @cvangemon1307 3 месяца назад +2

      A blank canvas.

    • @Brambrew
      @Brambrew 3 месяца назад +1

      @@cvangemon1307 like the final Calvin & Hobbes comic

    • @davisdf3064
      @davisdf3064 3 месяца назад

      There is no meaning, not even in Earth, the meaning comes from us, we give meaning to everything.
      We are made for giving meaning, it's in our blood.

  • @trungkien4187
    @trungkien4187 4 месяца назад +133

    Man you are way too underrated

  • @Betapvnk
    @Betapvnk 4 месяца назад +61

    Superliminal and Manifold Garden are definitely games that push rarer non-Euclidean designs

    • @whitewampa2910
      @whitewampa2910 3 месяца назад +1

      just so you know, circles and spheres are considered non-euclidean

    • @Betapvnk
      @Betapvnk 3 месяца назад +2

      @@whitewampa2910 thanks

    • @cheeseboy8241
      @cheeseboy8241 3 месяца назад

      you should check out Hyperbolica! it's actually properly non-Euclidean and a great game besides

  • @Vivicect0r
    @Vivicect0r 4 месяца назад +8

    As for Elite Dangerous, I believe it has the best feeling of endless space ever made. Its travelable in a somewhat reasonable time yet it shows perfectly the sheer size of our galaxy. Going 2500 times the speed of light yet you need several minutes to reach an object in the same star system as you. Its actually the only game where I chilled in a many month exploration expedition knowing that I have to spend a real life month to return and see another human, even while skipping 70 light years in a few seconds. I believe that time gap is actually what make you feel the size of a galaxy.

  • @arkwend4090
    @arkwend4090 3 месяца назад +3

    8 years ago, when Vsauce made a video on the Library of Babel, it was purely shocking.
    Infinite became palpable and abstract at the same time, it became comprehensible and incomprehensible at the same time.
    It became a truth teller for all that has, does, and will exist, as well as everything that could exist, maybe even including a multiverse.
    This video's exploration of infinity has really waked my brain up, got it into places it had never been.
    I never expected the subject could still have so much to offer, so I'm very grateful to you making these videos.
    The hardest hitting part was the Canvas of Babel.
    You made me realize just how much deeper it can go, that every single event that has happened, is happening, or will happen, including the whole multiverse, a complete slideshow of every single angle possible in all the positions possible in the whole universes, are captured there.
    You blew my mind with the revelation that the Library of Babel, as a screenshot or photo taken for each page, exists within the canvas.
    You actually made me re-experience the same level of shock and realization as 8 years ago.
    Wow, what an evening.
    This is a precious experience.
    Thank you very much.

  • @MainstreamSellout__EST
    @MainstreamSellout__EST 2 месяца назад +1

    One of the best games like this is The Long Drive.
    It's empty. You have a car, and a desert road. There's stops along the way, with supplies to keep you going. Just abandoned buildings some of them recognisable and some totally alien. There's sometimes weak enemies, but you can turn them off in the settings. I usually do.
    It's a ridiculously big, procedurally generated game, but it feels small. It feels real. Every stretch of the road feels like an actual journey.
    When I'm too tired or bummed out to enjoy 'proper' games, I play The Long Drive. I put on an album I love and just drive, with nothing but the road and my thoughts.
    It's probably my favorite game of all time.

  • @egontokessy1610
    @egontokessy1610 3 месяца назад +3

    Literally at the start of your video, I’m playing Dark Souls 2 and I’m in Majula. I’m listening to the sad melancholic music while watching the virtual sunset and waves.
    I’m thinking about the last video I watched to do about submerged mechanical phobias and thinking about the lost but recently rediscovered civilisation’s that are long dead and submerged underwater.
    It made your intro description way too on point with what I was doing as I notice a parallel between the from software souls games with lost civilisation’s and the parallel to real life civilisations that have been lost to history.
    It fills me with sadness but gratitude about how fleeting life is and how in time I will be long forgotten in history but can live a very meaningful life of fulfilment by going towards my value based goals in the present.
    I’m mostly happy but do feel sad that I will never have my curiosity satiated about learning our past history and will never get to see what the future looks like because my life is fleeting.

  • @hovant6666
    @hovant6666 3 месяца назад +2

    YES. YOU LINKED IT ALL TOGETHER. YES.
    Also, RE: Library of Babel, it will take only 10^1500 years for iron stars to form. Black holes will have evaporated by 10^90, and the stelliferous epoch of the universe will be far, far less

  • @luhdemco
    @luhdemco 4 месяца назад +22

    even if your videos don’t get 80mil views just know the people who watch genuinely enjoy and love them!!😘😘💯

    • @Haydenwern4113
      @Haydenwern4113 4 месяца назад +2

      This video is an almost 1:1 recreation of Jacob Geller's "the shape of infinity" the only differences it that this video came out 3 years after Geller's and the order of the topics he discusses is rearranged. and seeing the rest of this persons channel makes it clear to me that a lot of his videos are even more copys of already existing jacob Geller videos

  • @gtsteel
    @gtsteel 3 месяца назад +2

    I think that an important part of Manifold Garden is the realization that its levels don't repeat infinitely any more than the earth repeats infinitely. Like a sphere, they are finite (and often quite small), but compact. Those infinite spires in the distance are just different paths to reach the one beside you, wrapping around the manifold in different ways.

    • @cheeseboy8241
      @cheeseboy8241 3 месяца назад

      my extremely not Occam's Razor interpretation that I enjoy bc it's s mindfuck is that it is infinite, those other repeating spaces really are other identical spaces, and there are just infinite evenly spaced copies of any cube you pick up (bonus points bc that last part feels so goofy)

  • @nilok7
    @nilok7 4 месяца назад +7

    I just realized something that may actually turn the Library of Babel into something more than an examination of infinity.
    We now have access to Large Language Model AIs (LLMs), which have the ability to read language. There is ongoing research on if there is actual understanding there, and at least in Stable Diffusion there may be some form of understanding beyond statistics.
    An LLM would be able to start going through the Library of Babel and while it couldn't learn from it, it could exclude all nonsense books, turning the Library of Babel into a legible library. Something filled with stories, fiction and nonfiction, fantastical and mundane.

    • @ChaoticNeutralMatt
      @ChaoticNeutralMatt 3 месяца назад +3

      I can only imagine this.. from an algorithmic perspective. As actually traversing it would be time and resource ineffective

    • @nilok7
      @nilok7 3 месяца назад +2

      @@ChaoticNeutralMatt Well, that's assuming you're using a binary computer. However, if you use a quantum computer, you should be able to collapse the wave function to only the valid books all at once.
      The first big hurtle is that you need enough q-bits to hold the LLM, and our best quantum computer only has 1000 right now.

    • @ToastUrbath
      @ToastUrbath 3 месяца назад +1

      As I had just commented a second ago I imagine you could build a filter to eliminate all books which do not contain valid words, measured against our modern lexicon of course, and once you've narrowed the search down to only books which contain real words we can use that portion of the books and reduce those to only books which contain complete sentences. Of course this is easier said than done, and even still a book containing only valid words and in complete sentences no less does not mean those sentences will combine together to say anything; you would simply have a collection of every possible complete sentence. Even that might be a less than accurate way of representing what exactly you're observing still. But once you've done at least this much you will have at least found something more workably useful as even though you'll have surely eliminated all the gibberish you'll still have more books than could be observed. What fraction of the library contains only books such as these? Surely it is comparatively small to the exclude tomes and yet so vast. Although it might simply be easier to just build a collection of all possible sentences than to cut away the fat of the library itself.

    • @solsystem1342
      @solsystem1342 3 месяца назад

      ​​@@nilok7
      Great, then we just need a way to mathematically filter out nonsense word combinations from plaintext. Then also a way to make sure that the book makes sense and is actually readable. After that you'd need an algorithm for truth so the machine doesn't just turn out constant lies and every single one of these steps is more absurd than the next.
      You may be able to snoop on internet traffic with a quantum computer but to create a algorithmic process to produce only true statements would require the designer to be omnipotent already.
      Related rant: quantum computers still process things algorithmically. You still need to write a program that destructively interferes with everything except the correct answer (and sometimes other values that we can extract the correct answer from with conventional computers) ie: shors algorithm produces (mostly) correct answers and multiples of that correct answers. If we get our potential keys it's simple enough simplify them to a prime numbers and check if their product matches the public key with conventional computers.

    • @nilok7
      @nilok7 3 месяца назад

      @@solsystem1342 We have an algorithm for that, it's Large Language Model AIs.
      As for truth, we're not looking for truth.
      The library will contain both fact and fiction. It will be for humanity to read through it and find which have tangible meaning.

  • @mycroft3322
    @mycroft3322 19 дней назад

    NaissanceE is so captivating and stylistic that it’s stuck with me for years and I can’t stop thinking about it

  • @terryterry5653
    @terryterry5653 3 месяца назад +2

    it's fairly alarming when an enormous desert or rooms the size of jupiter manages to give you a sense of claustrophobia. i guess that's the weight of infinity for you

  • @Wersser
    @Wersser 4 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for making this sort of content and for the games, I'll definitely play them.
    I like that you're doing vids on such obscure topics. Keep it up!

  • @saigesplayce3915
    @saigesplayce3915 25 дней назад +1

    I KNEW I HEARD WINTERMUTE IN THERE
    sorry I’m an obsessive Long Dark player. Was it just me that got really happy when they heard that?
    Always makes me really happy when people learn about hidden indie gems like The Long Dark, even if you aren’t interested in the game itself, it’s soundtrack is also amazing and Wintermute is one of my favorite songs of all time, as well as Crossroad’s Elegy.

  • @oberonpanopticon
    @oberonpanopticon 4 месяца назад +1

    Imagine how creepy it would be if you saw a comprehensible image in the babel image archives. Especially if it was personal.

  • @xBINARYGODx
    @xBINARYGODx 3 месяца назад +3

    There is not meaning, or lack of meaning, inherent to anything. The human brain decides variably was does and does not matter.

    • @xBINARYGODx
      @xBINARYGODx 3 месяца назад +2

      Also, you earned a sub (anyone talks about stuff similar to Gellar but without his annoying-to-me voice is a keeper), but this video feels like a 15-20m video with some stuff repeated too much. Maybe that was on purpose, but I would argue you could have handled that point better.

  • @Mr_Unpopular
    @Mr_Unpopular 4 месяца назад +2

    20k? Bro your content makes me think, you make me feel emotions with your content, you have a gift and you are super underrated

    • @Haydenwern4113
      @Haydenwern4113 4 месяца назад

      This video is an almost 1:1 recreation of Jacob Geller's "the shape of infinity" the only differences it that this video came out 3 years after Geller's and the order of the topics he discusses is rearranged. this creator has copied jacob in the past aswell so no, not underrated

    • @Mr_Unpopular
      @Mr_Unpopular 4 месяца назад

      @@Haydenwern4113 i dont know a lot about Jacob Geller, is all of his content a ripoff though because i am talking about all of his content

  • @NatanTrombetta
    @NatanTrombetta 3 месяца назад +3

    if you have not read it, i strongly recommend girls last tour, it's a manga that for what i saw about Blame! in this video (i've never read it but i badly want now!) is very similar in artstyle, at least for scenery, and vibe. It's not exactly infinite or about inifinity, but it is about contemplation of the wider world and how the human fits in it.

  • @north_01fm58
    @north_01fm58 3 месяца назад

    The signalis ost went so hard, as i didn't expect to hear it there. Great video, i love your content!

  • @SpringySpring04
    @SpringySpring04 4 месяца назад +5

    Hey, NaissanceE! I liked that game, it was quite an interesting experience and it does certainly have parallels to the infinite megastructure architecture in "Blame!". Wandering around in NaissanceE gave me feelings reminiscent of wandering around the dream worlds of Yume Nikki, it was quite relaxing.
    Also, the concept of the Library of Babel and the Canvas of Babel feels a lot like the monkey typewriter thought experiment, where if you had a bunch of monkeys sitting and using typewriters, and given infinite amount of time, one of them will eventually produce a perfect word-for-word copy of a Shakespeare play or something, lol

  • @Abnerxdlol
    @Abnerxdlol 4 месяца назад +1

    I hope I get more than 1millions subscribers soon, this channel it's so underrated, I've been following you for a little over 7 months and I love this channel, you always do your commentary so chill and very emotional in a way I can't describe, I just had to tell you you do a great job and hope you get the recognition you deserve

  • @abdulapusztito1184
    @abdulapusztito1184 4 месяца назад

    I just stumbled across your channel today and binged 5 vids so far, love your work bro keep it up!

  • @adisanjay7178
    @adisanjay7178 4 месяца назад +9

    Such carefully crafted content! A true wizard with words. Subbed👍🏼

    • @Haydenwern4113
      @Haydenwern4113 4 месяца назад +1

      This video is an almost 1:1 recreation of Jacob Geller's "the shape of infinity" the only differences it that this video came out 3 years after Geller's and the order of the topics he discusses is rearranged. so no, you are not correct, not a wisard just a liar

  • @secondhandguitarist
    @secondhandguitarist 4 месяца назад +2

    Wow. I found your channel from the backrooms video and I'm already hooked. The way you discuss these incomprehensible concepts is something I've never seen replicate.

    • @Haydenwern4113
      @Haydenwern4113 4 месяца назад

      This video is an almost 1:1 recreation of Jacob Geller's "the shape of infinity" the only differences it that this video came out 3 years after Geller's and the order of the topics he discusses is rearranged. its crazy because the thing you say you've never seen replicated is a copy of someone else's work

  • @momsaccount4033
    @momsaccount4033 2 месяца назад +1

    Using SIGNALIS music while talking about BLAME! is genius

  • @inkdragon3455
    @inkdragon3455 4 месяца назад

    This video is so good. I guess I found another video essay channel to add to my playlists

  • @mategido
    @mategido 4 месяца назад +2

    Damn awesome video, do your job algorithm, this man deserves it

  • @rtx_____
    @rtx_____ 2 месяца назад

    this channel is insane. i fucking love watching ur videos, especially since u talk about things that are of high interest for me. plus the editing and vibes are spot on. keep going we support u👊🏻👊🏻

  • @katakana1
    @katakana1 4 месяца назад +2

    I remember having a dream like 10 years ago where I was trapped in an infinite bathroom. I was stuck in the bathrooms

  • @kylemd97
    @kylemd97 4 месяца назад

    Your videos have become utterly captivating to me in such a way that inspires me to want to make similar videos. I'm constantly impressed by the effort and the writing and the immense amount of thought involved with these kinds of topics. I look forward to seeing more and hope you keep succeeding, and I know there will eventually be millions after me who feel the same

    • @Haydenwern4113
      @Haydenwern4113 4 месяца назад +2

      This video is an almost 1:1 recreation of Jacob Geller's "the shape of infinity" the only differences it that this video came out 3 years after Geller's and the order of the topics he discusses is rearranged. i hope this person stops it because this is not the first time they have done this

    • @kylemd97
      @kylemd97 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Haydenwern4113 sad to say I went searching for videos of a similar nature after becoming engrossed in them and I also started hearing the same information on videos from several years prior. It doesn't seem to be the case with every video on this channel, but it vastly changed my view knowing that I'm not witnessing hard work and entirely original writing turn into a successful hidden gem channel of video essays.

  • @AlanZucconi
    @AlanZucconi 4 месяца назад

    Thank you for making this! 👏
    The style of your channel is very close to what I would like mine to be!

    • @Haydenwern4113
      @Haydenwern4113 4 месяца назад

      This video is an almost 1:1 recreation of Jacob Geller's "the shape of infinity" the only differences it that this video came out 3 years after Geller's and the order of the topics he discusses is rearranged. :)

  • @Datan0de
    @Datan0de Месяц назад

    I'm not sure how I stumbled across this video, but I happened to be playing Elite Dangerous when I died out up in the background! Glancing over at the video and seeing the same cockpit that was on my computer monitor was surreal.

  • @itskoolest
    @itskoolest 4 месяца назад

    cool video! i wasnt expecting the little tie-in at the end but its a really nice touch!!

  • @fractalsauce
    @fractalsauce 3 месяца назад

    Hey I just found you and watched the Games About Nothing video and then this one. Just wanna say I really like what you've got going on here and I think I'll stay a while. Thanks for the great vids :)

  • @danflash8639
    @danflash8639 4 месяца назад

    Just wow smazing video and the music you used was exceptional

  • @Miku-yu5iu
    @Miku-yu5iu 3 месяца назад

    thank you for this piece of art , especially enjoyed the blame section

  • @doomrevolver8387
    @doomrevolver8387 3 месяца назад

    I clicked on this and had no idea you were gonna talk about one of my favourite scifi stories ever. Blame is fascinating.

  • @moshelinke2979
    @moshelinke2979 4 месяца назад +3

    thanks for having Fugue in Void in this cool video ❤

    • @cheeseboy8241
      @cheeseboy8241 3 месяца назад

      great game dude, I gotta replay. the vibes are unmatched

  • @CaptainPointless
    @CaptainPointless 4 месяца назад

    Amazing video! Thank you for making this.

  • @jambothejoyful2966
    @jambothejoyful2966 3 месяца назад

    Yessss I love NaissanceE, its one of my favorite games I'm so glad you're giving it the attention it deserves!

  • @russjordan6186
    @russjordan6186 4 месяца назад +2

    Amazing content as always

  • @d3monshadow
    @d3monshadow 4 месяца назад

    I love this video for just showing me cool stuff

  • @NormalGuyINCorp
    @NormalGuyINCorp 4 месяца назад +19

    Eternity is a scary thing this video portrayed it really well.

  • @SilverInkblot
    @SilverInkblot 4 месяца назад +1

    Borges was commenting on a phenomenon that didn't even exist yet and calling out problems he knew we would one day have. What is the Internet if not a giant library? On such a massive scale, all information is effectively zero information; infinity goes in all directions. It's fascinating that a person could be so prescient.
    Borges himself was blind and a librarian in his later years; access to information and difficulty parsing it would have been a familiar struggle. You gotta love how many different levels this metaphor works on.

  • @0Blueaura
    @0Blueaura 4 месяца назад +11

    man i loved naissance

    • @Sodasaman
      @Sodasaman 4 месяца назад +1

      E

    • @ohmnesia
      @ohmnesia 3 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for writing down the name. Didn't now how to write it and the creator of the video somehow didn't reference it anywhere

  • @foxxify1
    @foxxify1 4 месяца назад +1

    I walked up those stairs for at least 45 minutes at 1 am

  • @Waryfuls
    @Waryfuls 4 месяца назад +2

    I remember having this one dream where I was drowning in 'a Minecraft like world' which was like 10 blocks deep but infinite in width, under that a black infinite void. If you managed to stay up in the water, there was also an infinite sky with no clouds. I hold it out for like 5 minutes of swimming then fell out of the world for a few seconds. That triggered a 'panick attack' that made me wake up.

  • @nicolebarfuss3067
    @nicolebarfuss3067 3 месяца назад

    close your eyes. count to one. that's how long forever feels.

  • @oscar_gekko
    @oscar_gekko 3 месяца назад

    Thanks a lot ! Very inspiring.👏

  • @danielkeller6610
    @danielkeller6610 4 месяца назад

    I loved this. You have a new subscriber! 👍💚

  • @jargontrueseer
    @jargontrueseer 3 месяца назад

    This is a very cool channel and I'm glad I found it!
    It's subscribin' time!!

  • @Shadowkey392
    @Shadowkey392 4 месяца назад

    The point is to ensure that there is always something out there that hasn’t been seen yet.

  • @joselucasfarias1
    @joselucasfarias1 4 месяца назад

    Amazing video btw. The library of babel isnt a well know topic, even more here. On the first minutes of the videos i was wondering about it. The you just surprise me ,lol. I love the concept and have read a lot of borges because of it, i'm happy to find it around in yt.

  • @phuturephunk
    @phuturephunk 4 месяца назад +5

    I wasn't expecting a kid half my age to give me an existential crisis on a random Saturday, but here we are. Well done.
    Many years ago I did a 11K ly trip to a random O class star on the starmap in a slightly tricked out Hauler. I get this video on a fundamental level.

  • @codynovick5701
    @codynovick5701 4 месяца назад +1

    Having seen both Jacob Geller's and now your video, I truly appreciate how much there is to say on this topic. Both of your videos are very well thought out and well written essays about this topic that are looking at it from differing perspectives, and both of you have said things that I haven't thought about it before. But I spend so much of my time wondering at infinity that I doubt that either of you have nailed every thought I've ever had about it, and I don't even have the motivation to write an essay or record a video. Idk, thank you for taking your time with this project and I'm sorry you got flak for copying someone you clearly didn't copy. It is tough in this day and age, where people throw around accusations of plagiarism when it can be so unfairly harmful to someone's livelihood if untrue. I think IP is the real joke in all of it, the library of babel being the best example of the folly inherently built in. Someone HAS already imagined everything and anything there is to imagine, there IS no such thing as an original idea. Giving credit to someone makes enough sense while they live and can use it to prosper, but there is IP on the books that belongs to corpses and corporations will defend that IP with millions if not billions if need be. It would be hilarious, if it weren't so sad. Idk, I appreciate your existence while acknowledging that all individual existence is meaningless in an infinite universe, and I think it is super stupid neat we can hold these contradicting ideas inside us simultaneously. Keep up the awesome work, and don't let haters discourage you when they clearly haven't taken the time to watch both videos all the way through

  • @Tiresias141
    @Tiresias141 3 месяца назад +2

    I would like to recommend to everyone watching this video the short story "El inmortal" (the inmortal) from Jorge Luis Borges.
    Is truly an experience to read it and it plays a lot with the notion of an infinite space and an infinite time, so if you can get a translation or read it in spanish, i highly recommend it!

  • @CreepyDemonYT
    @CreepyDemonYT 4 месяца назад

    Amazing video as always!

  • @TheTurtleinariver
    @TheTurtleinariver 4 месяца назад +1

    aw schweet new existential dread just dropped

  • @Redafro7
    @Redafro7 4 месяца назад

    Great vid. Though I gotta push back a bit. To me, the idea of an infinite Good, one that is itself fractal in how it infinitely unfolds makes eternity not only interesting but the hight of positive existential awe.

  • @beeallen2743
    @beeallen2743 4 месяца назад +1

    Love that manifold garden got a mention. I was thinking about it since I saw the title lol

  • @starlightsynthonies
    @starlightsynthonies 3 месяца назад

    The Library of Babel literally brought a tear to my eye. It is beautiful in an existential awe-inspiring way

  • @BinaryDood
    @BinaryDood 4 месяца назад +1

    I never thought the Builders went out of control. They merely continued the work of humanity bu converting every bit of mater in space to the artifice of humanity. Like we stopped building a world for people long ago, and the builders gave it its dialectical end.

  • @flyingwolf1299
    @flyingwolf1299 3 месяца назад

    I CLICKED IN THE MIDDLE OF THE VIDEO AND INSTANTLY RECOGNIZED SIGNALIS MUSIC

  • @MiguelMoreno-cr8db
    @MiguelMoreno-cr8db 4 месяца назад

    keep up the hard efforts on making this type of video. I promise you god well give you the prize that you deserve.

    • @Haydenwern4113
      @Haydenwern4113 4 месяца назад

      this creator did not have a hard time, This video is an almost 1:1 recreation of Jacob Geller's "the shape of infinity" the only differences it that this video came out 3 years after Geller's and the order of the topics he discusses is rearranged.

  • @oberonpanopticon
    @oberonpanopticon 4 месяца назад +2

    20:57 Actually, it does. There are names for any number no matter how large. Welcome to infinity.

  • @williansnobre
    @williansnobre 3 месяца назад

    That archive of books and images is a fun mathematical experiment and it is quite creepy but I personally find it creepier to think that something alien or AI could be able to break it.

  • @complex_city
    @complex_city 4 месяца назад +3

    5:40 distance between bros eyes bigger than the city could ever hope to be

  • @alasanof
    @alasanof 4 месяца назад +1

    You forgot to mention the best part of Manifold Garden where you can drag the cubes against stairs and they make satisfying noises.

  • @MarauderXXX
    @MarauderXXX 3 месяца назад

    In an endless sea of the random and the nonsensical across the WWW, it was cool to find this on my feed. Cheers!

  • @arkadianmc2917
    @arkadianmc2917 4 месяца назад +1

    This made me open the library of babel, see you after the thermal death of the universe

    • @endredomokos1770
      @endredomokos1770 4 месяца назад

      Hey, I recommend taking a quick detour to "in a nutshell" on RUclips and their video on what will happen after the heat death of the universe, just so you can be prepared

    • @arkadianmc2917
      @arkadianmc2917 3 месяца назад

      @@endredomokos1770 oh thanks, tho i don't think anything at all would happen other than bumping into slowly decelerating atoms, but still you never know

  • @starfirejordan9875
    @starfirejordan9875 4 месяца назад

    Im so glad i clicked on this video its sooooo good
    Im at a loss for words honestly. if only i can find a book in the library of babel that would tell me what would be the prefect comment to put onto this video

    • @Haydenwern4113
      @Haydenwern4113 4 месяца назад +1

      This video is an almost 1:1 recreation of Jacob Geller's "the shape of infinity" the only differences it that this video came out 3 years after Geller's and the order of the topics he discusses is rearranged.

  • @Katvanished
    @Katvanished 3 месяца назад +1

    I’m suprised nobody mentioned, but the size of the city is set, it’s roughly the size of the solar system, although it reaches irregularly to the Oort cloud

  • @GenesisAria
    @GenesisAria 4 месяца назад

    The VRChat worlds Organism, and it's Epilogues are kind of like this, while not truly infinite, but they are a reality marble labyrinth that just seem to keep going and going. Experiencing it in VR hits different; put in your perspective, all you have is awe..

  • @reminiscentiaoff4669
    @reminiscentiaoff4669 2 месяца назад

    Elite is a fun case bc it's a very very very old series (beginning in the early 1980s) with the first game having 2048 planets to explore, even when the game was running off a pile of floppy discs (256 planets to visit spread across 8 or so galaxies). So without its huge galaxy it would have been wrong, in a way - or at least run counter to the series' ethos. It was the first of its kind, so it makes sense they would want to keep pushing their limits. Or frontiers, so to speak.
    Very goode video, I got a bit absorbed with Elite there fore a moment lmao.

  • @Lianotube
    @Lianotube 4 месяца назад

    damn i love your videos bro❤

  • @ElDaumo
    @ElDaumo 4 месяца назад +3

    The pronounciation of BLAME! kills me

  • @takanashi8905
    @takanashi8905 4 месяца назад +6

    Hell yea! Blame! getting more love

  • @howww4530
    @howww4530 3 месяца назад

    Great video man :)

  • @naturalistmind
    @naturalistmind 4 месяца назад +1

    I believe this feeling is called hubris

  • @Mecharnie_Dobbs
    @Mecharnie_Dobbs 3 месяца назад

    Yes, I have. And I have wandered for ages through a featureless simulated desert with the only thing changing being how much smaller the single pyramid got in the distance.

  • @Hypercube2017
    @Hypercube2017 4 месяца назад +31

    I see now. The Library of Babbel, much like the Tower of Babbel, is an exercise in hubris. Humanity created something impossibly large. And, feeling successful, hundreds, thousands of people flock to the Library of Babbel, determined to be the one to find _something,_ anything. To find the answers to questions unanswered, to find the questions unasked. Believing in their hubris that they have made something infinite, that they have answered and asked every question. But they fail to realize the task they've given themselves; blinded by hubris, by pride and ego, humanity searches in endless, nonsensical tomes for answers, unaware that for every answer, there are a hundred, thousand, million false answers, hidden by billions, of trillions, of quadrillions of almost answers, hidden by unimaginable numbers of nonsense. The time from the beginning of the universe to its literal *heat death* (assuming proton decay) is said to be 10^110 years. Without proton decay, in only 10^1500 years iron stars will form. The Library of Babbel, 10^4677 books long, is an infinite word search, within an infinite word search, not a library of hidden answers to every mystery. Humanity can find answers... but not within that social experiment.

    • @adultpersonman4612
      @adultpersonman4612 4 месяца назад +8

      I read it in a slightly different way. Instead of it being a metaphor for hubris, it represents humanity’s desperation. Some people are willing to spend their entire lives in the library, searching through an infinite amount of nonsense, just to find one clear, glimpse of something that makes sense. Even if it’s just a sentence, it would make all of the chaos and nonsense and all of your hard work feel like it has a purpose.

    • @saucevc8353
      @saucevc8353 4 месяца назад +5

      The Babel aspect of the library could also represent the gibberish that makes up the vast majority of the library, much like the curse that God put upon the builders of the Tower in the Old Testament. If only the books were comprehensible, we could reach heaven, but because they are not, our efforts are doomed to fail.

    • @Hypercube2017
      @Hypercube2017 4 месяца назад +2

      Yes, both of you... hubris, pride, desperation, a desire to reach heaven, perhaps even to _take_ heaven. Doomed from the start, but nonetheless, a burning desire to find something, anything, keeps people pushing forward. Regardless of whether or not what they find has meaning (a single word, a couple words, perhaps even a full sentence); in a way it seems that the allure is of the "because we can" nature, possibly stemming from hubris or pride as I speculated.
      Though, it could also come from more altruistic desires; as Cresendex says, the cure for cancer _is_ in there... however, a hundred, thousand false cures are also in there. Perhaps the Library was never actually meant to be used to find information, but to produce it. To see the _why_ of people searching unceasingly through tomes of nonsense for a chance - however miniscule - at discovering something important. Whether for a determination to uncover truth and record history like professor Zei from ATLA, or for a chance at glory like Dr. Wily from Megaman or certain real-life examples.

  • @morpheus_uat
    @morpheus_uat 4 месяца назад +1

    i love naissancee, i played back then in 2016, amazing walk simulator, it reminded me of Randevous with Rama
    im gonna check that Blam manga you mention, it looks amazing
    cheers