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6 answers

*No !!!
U just have to watch these type of movies with yr brain left behind ... at home !!!!

2007-12-03 04:20:16 · answer #1 · answered by ๏๓ รђคภtเ, รђคภtเ รђคภtเ ....... ! 7 · 0 0

The theory the Matrix suggests goes back to faith in general. Faith in a wrong area of life could have the effect of an illusion. This faith could be directed at a person, the government, religion, etc. People are subject to believing what they see. The Matrix makes you think about the idea that, "What if everything you knew was a lie?" As it was stated, the senses are just electrical impulses into the brain. So how can you really trust your senses? The Matrix answers this question with the idea of a computer generated dream world. Reality as we know it, could possibly be of this same thought. Every single person perceives his world differently. But there is one constant. Senses. SOmeone could be munipilating these senses from a far.

2007-12-04 13:41:51 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No.
The biggest problem in the world scenario presented in The Matrix movies is food for the humans.
There is an idea that the humans in the cells were fed intravenously, which is lovely, but nutrients come from biological sources, which need sunlight.
Machines can distribute food, but somebody somewhere needed to figure out the logistics for growing food raising food, processing food, as well as distributing enough food per person in either the cells or alive and walking around in the freedom city.
But in the world presented on screen, there was no clear or obvious source of food for the people contained in the machines cells or for the underground people. They were awfully healthy, weren't they? The underground people should have been nowhere near as healthy, as they also need sunlight to survive besides water and underground grubs. The world presented was perpetually dark, the sun covered up by the clouds of smoke created by the machines. The oxygen levels on the planet would have dropped without regular periods of sunlight, trees and plants to filter and exchange oxygen for our exhaled carbon dioxide.
Theoretically, Neo "wakes up" and has the physical motion and strength to undo his hose attachments. Realistically he shouldn't have been able to move if he had been born and raised in a water-filled cell and in a constant dream-like state without ever having moved his muscles, and yet he is able to walk and talk as an "awake" person almost immediately if not within a few hours or days after he wakes up.
No, there were too many problems like that for me to accept the possibilty of The Matrix as being real in any way.

2007-12-05 14:32:34 · answer #3 · answered by enn 6 · 0 0

Yes, it says that everything you have ever experienced is actually a computer simulation.

This applies to the first Matrix only, not the ridiculous sequels.

2007-12-03 04:19:13 · answer #4 · answered by Fire_God_69 5 · 0 0

Don't know what you mean by 'coherence' but I like the idea that reality isn't what it appears to be,

2007-12-03 05:25:46 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

well,the theory that the reality that we know isn't for real is quite intriguing. also,it may not necessarily be a highly advanced ai that's responsible for keeping us trapped in an illusory world. it may be aliens, a dictator, or even god (or gods) himself

2007-12-03 07:57:28 · answer #6 · answered by dead_funk_2mor 2 · 0 0

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