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The story in Be More Chill involves a young man named Jeremy Heere, who buys a pill that will supposedly tell him how to be cool.

You take the pill and the tiny computer latches onto your brain. The pill's CPU navigates itself to the brain of the user, where it communicates with them as a voice in their head. It is programmed to give to individual advice on how to achieve what he or she desires most in life

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Squip

2007-02-14 07:31:48 · 3 answers · asked by supadol88 2 in Social Science Psychology

you can turn it off

2007-02-14 09:16:05 · update #1

3 answers

if it would help me be happier in life, then yes, i would... although i would be terrified of it malfunctioning :[ lol

2007-02-14 07:56:30 · answer #1 · answered by Jessabeth 2 · 0 0

No thanks. I don't want to start acting like what some other person's idea of "cool" might be. I guess you wouldn't have to take the advice, but then you'd have this nattering voice in your head disagreeing with the way you do things. Is there a way to turn it off? Maybe you could use it only in particular circumstances. But, no, even then, you'd be giving over your behaviour to something that isn't really you. Too creepy.

2007-02-14 16:18:38 · answer #2 · answered by senlin 7 · 0 0

No! I often think that I am influenced by outside sources such as books and television more than I should be. You wouldn't be self-actualizing, but more of a puppet. How lazy can you get, if you don't even think for yourself?

2007-02-14 18:29:30 · answer #3 · answered by Charlie Kicksass 7 · 0 0

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