What could you possibly view us as? I suppose you could make a kind of abstract statement like we are just characters, concepts and behaviours ... but what does that mean?
Something analogous to Plutarch's resolution of the Ship of Theseus problem (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ship_of_Theseus#Proposed_resolutions).
The world is just fundamental units of matter and energy (and maybe some other things). Everything we overlay on top of it is just a model we impose to try to make sense of it. I could, for example, model you as krinid the person, a consistent, continuous, and coherent arrangement of matter with semi-predictable behavior; this would allow me to extend inferences (e.g., you seem to view me as someone doing the right thing but presenting myself poorly) through leaps of logic into character traits (e.g., you are kind, not interested in sparking conflict, and willing to view people in positive lights) that attempt to predict your behavior across time.
Like naming a river, though, this model runs into problems. For one, there's the asymmetric insight problem- your "Michael Moore" model of "me" as a person does not comport with other behavior ("I" sometimes
do take advantage of people and evidently present "myself" extremely well in the process). It also misses nuances that I'm aware of that you don't appear to know of- the "Michael Moore" thing is presently somewhat deliberate. If I come across as "a jerk who's right" [my oversimplification, not your words], that's a wildly beneficial model that I can take advantage of because you're likely predisposed to respond to errors and missteps as merely failures of presentation and try to fit new statements into your model of me being right but bad at getting my points across. This results in charitable behavior where you consciously and unconsciously reframe what I say very charitably; at scale, this means I can get across different messages to different people, all of whom would interpret what I'm saying differently but with the bias of aligning their interpretation with what they find most agreeable. Compare your reaction to the borderline-sociopathic statements i make (expressions of curiosity and assumptions of good faith) with nonolet's and Parsifal's (who interpret them as me exposing myself or digging a hole, because their model of l4v.r0v the person predisposes them to interpret my statements
uncharitably). Your tendency in this conversation to model me as a person is an exploitable behavior, once I'm able to infer the model. (Of course, I don't actually try to exploit "you" here, since this strategy presupposes the model of krinid the person.)
Beyond these pragmatic issues, you run into something analogous to the Ship of Theseus paradox & fundamental attribution error. E.g., the models someone reading this thread would build of "nonolet the person" or "Parsifal the person" or "Bane the person" or "Cursona the person" or "Ursus the person" would often fail to predict their behavior elsewhere and occasionally break on edge cases and weird thought experiments. All of these "people" display behavior consistent with kindness, empathy, and sincerity in many other places. Parsifal in this thread displays a tendency to periodically jump in only to put others down; Parsifal in his Warzone Idle guide behaves rather differently. Parsifal, the collection of minds that believes they're a person, has sufficient information to model this well and reconcile these discrepancies; I don't, and neither do most other observers- so if we tried to figure out "Parsifal," we'd just get it wrong and converge to confidence too fast (see: nonolet).
When trying to reconcile these models, it's easy to fall back on "well, humans are complex." But, like adding epicycles to the geocentric model of our solar system, you'd just be adding more complex (and brittle) elements to your model of "humans" to try and salvage its predictive value. Instead, my answer is: "well, humans aren't real. Model something else."
So,
finally responding to your question- the question is flawed. I don't view "you" as anything, because "you" aren't krinid. You're many minds, playing different roles at different times, and especially on online spaces like this one I know so little about the similarities between these minds that I can't hope to coherently figure out who "you" are. In this domain, instead of trying to model "you" as a "who," it makes sense to model these
interactions with "you" separately. In other words, the model I impose here is not of humans but of conversations. This makes things like reputation moot.
It's really hard because these notions of people and consistent beings are built most likely not just into our language- we don't differentiate between "you" as in the entity perceiving this
right now and "you" as in this notion of a long-lived person- but also into how our minds operate. Modeling people also has had strong evolutionary advantages, like allowing the development of concepts like trust and reputation to inflict some sort of accountability that can only be coherently expressed if framed in terms of people. In general, these limitations make it hard to convey the concepts I wish to convey, because language and thought themselves assume I'm wrong.
One solution to this has been the high-anonymity/zero-identity model of image boards like 4chan. My approach is to just not bother pretending I can understand "you," and to err on the side of responding directly and transparently without regard for how "you" might view me- because the massive benefits of the model are outweighed by educational costs. (I won't claim to be good at this. I've certainly unconsciously built models of all these "people" and they have those side effects, like contempt.)
Edited 10/15/2021 23:01:30