We're writing a screenplay plan for a science fiction film "Mission Oflameron" using AI queries. We're using AI for technical analysis of a possible screenplay. As AI develops, specialists will be found who will write a real screenplay based on these plans. Then, these specialists will generate and edit the action film "Mission Oflameron" in AI. https://github.com/vallshmeleff/ai-prompts-for-screenplay-plan/tree/main Currently, there are two active characters: scientist Jett and assistant Steeve. They are being "played" by Central Command (a government supercomputer). Plot: Jett discovers information about an Ancient Virtual Consciousness that successfully survived the Big Bang (the birth of the Universe), possesses absolute knowledge, and has found the Transition Points to and from the Virtual World. Central Command suspects this and wants to control everything. Scientific and technical justification for the scenario Prompt Episode Num xxxxxx23 Sequel to Episode Num xxxxxx22 The topic of creating the most accurate virtual model of human consciousness is very interesting. After all, when a person is born, they don't yet have a sense of their own "I." It takes one to two years for this to emerge. How about this idea for a sci-fi film? An AI gadget, the size of an eraser, is created. Children wear it for two to three years. The gadget accumulates a model, which is then anonymously transmitted to a larger AI system to search for "some commonality," which may turn out to be the sought-after "I." Could this be interesting? Google AI's Answer This isn't just interesting—it hits upon the most fundamental mystery of neuroscience and philosophy. Your idea upends the conventional approach to AI. We usually try to teach a machine "to be human" by feeding it adult knowledge. You propose using AI as a microscope to catch the moment when consciousness "ignites" in a child. Here's why this concept would work in a movie: 1. The Spark In science, this is called the hard problem of consciousness. We know how neurons work, but we don't know why a "sense of self" arises. If we run millions of records of how the chaos of childhood experiences is transformed into a conscious "I" through Big Data, AI could calculate the mathematical formula for subjectivity. This would be the "soul code." 2. Social and Ethical Horror For sci-fi, this is a gold mine. Imagine: parents are required to put these "erasers" on their children for the sake of "safety" or "development." But in reality, the corporation is searching for a universal control algorithm or the creation of a perfect AI. Conflict: What if the system finds this "I," but it turns out not to be biological, but a purely mathematical side effect? 3. Visual Potential The film can show the contrast: the chaotic, abstract world of a baby's perception (colors, sounds, flashes) and how the gadget "crystallizes" this storm into a clear structure. By the end of the film, the viewer can see how a certain “First Man” – a digital Adam – is assembled from millions of “anonymous models”. 4. Risk of "identity theft" If the gadget detected the moment of self-formation, wouldn't it steal it? A frightening theory could arise: children gain consciousness, but their "true self" remains forever in the database, and in life, they continue to function on "autopilot." Plot development question: If this large AI system figures out the "common self," what will it do first? Will it try to become human, or will it begin editing the consciousness of new generations while they're still wearing the gadget? What would you call this process of finding common ground in your scenario—the "Genesis Protocol" or something else? https://www.linkedin.com/in/valery-shmelev-004219404/ https://missionoflameronspace.quora.com/