@rauchg did us a favor. Now we can easily spot and distance ourselves from biased, brainwashed people, who operate under herd mentality -- by simply spotting anyone leaving Vercel now.
๐บ๐ธ ๐ฎ๐ฑ ๐ฆ๐ท
Enjoyed my discussion with PM Netanyahu on how AI education and literacy will keep our free societies ahead.
We spoke about AI empowering everyone to build software and the importance of ensuring it serves quality and progress.
Optimistic for peace, safety, and greatness for Israel and its neighbors.
Shana Tova to all Jews around the world
What may feel like a dark Winter today will once again become Spring
Hate will turn into art and lies will fuel science
The Jews persist and then they flourish
3/ And there's one important property of Light: it shines even in the darkest places, it can't be missed. While darkness is the absence of Light, it's nothingness; Light will fill it eventually.
1/ From day to day it's becoming more and more obvious, antisemitism is being spread everywhere using sophisticated new technologies, a vile example of how evil and darkness emerge from disinformation and unethical use of tools that can be better used for progress and flourishing
2/ This is where decisive thinking is relevant, you either believe in good (or better called Light) and side against antisemtism, or you believe in evil (or better said, stay in the dark) and feed disinformation further.
This is a test of choosing between Light and darkness;
@WalidAbuHaya1@walidjoumblatt Even though you don't like Joumblatt's ideas and behaviors (and so do I, by the way), let's stay humble when winning and ืืื ืฉืืื ืืืื
ChatGPT: The explanation given by the other AI is false. While the image is inspired by ancient Egyptian judgment scenes, it is not an authentic depiction of the Weighing of the Heart ritual, nor does it feature Horus and Thoth holding a balance scale. Instead, it is a modern reinterpretation with surreal or symbolic elements.
Key Reasons the Explanation Is Incorrect:
No Balance Scale:
In genuine Weighing of the Heart scenes, Anubis is typically shown operating a balance scale, weighing the deceased's heart against Ma'at's feather.
Here, there is no balance scale at all. Instead, we see two large gods with elongated arms holding human figures with strings, which is not a known part of ancient Egyptian iconography.
Incorrect Identification of Deities:
The gods in the image do not resemble Horus or Thoth:
Horus is usually depicted with a falcon head, but neither god here has that.
Thoth is typically shown with an ibis head (or as a baboon), but again, this is absent.
Instead, the gods here appear to be Amun-Ra (left) and Sobek (right), but their proportions and features are exaggerated beyond historical accuracy.
Hieroglyphic Text:
While the hieroglyphs appear detailed, their actual meaning is unclear. They may be decorative rather than forming a coherent text.
Without a linguistic analysis, assuming they describe a Book of the Dead scene is speculative.
Unusual Symbolism and Artistic Exaggerations:
The elongated arms controlling humans like puppets are not an element of ancient Egyptian art.
The lower section shows enslaved or struggling people, a modern addition that does not match the usual structure of judgment scenes.
The gods do not interact with a deceased person or Osiris, which is a standard feature in real judgment depictions.
Conclusion:
The image is not an authentic ancient Egyptian artwork and does not accurately depict the Weighing of the Heart scene. Instead, it is a modern artistic creation, likely symbolizing divine control over humanity rather than judgment and cosmic balance. The other AI's interpretation was mistaken.