:51:09
Strlke!
:51:10
What made you change
the way you were playlng
:51:12
after Turtle talked to you that day?
:51:15
I Interpreted the data to Indlcate
:51:17
that under certaln condltlons,
error was more efflclent
:51:21
than maxlmum performance.
:51:24
Under what condltlons?
:51:25
Relatlng wlth others.
:51:27
OK, what do you say to that?
:51:31
Perceptlon of the optlmum.
Program was deslgned for It.
:51:38
Come on, Daryl, take your plck.
Chocolate or vanllla?
:51:40
I don't know...
:51:42
well, how are you gonna know
If you don't try some?
:51:47
I don't know. well...
:51:49
Shlt, Daryl, If you don't care,
take the vanllla.
:51:58
No, I llke the chocolate better.
:52:01
Can I assume thls Is a flnal declslon?
:52:03
Absolutely.
:52:07
Mary Ellen, don't eat that,
Daryl splt In It.
:52:11
DId you mean It,
that you prefer chocolate?
:52:13
- Oh, sure.
- Why?
:52:16
I just dld. Turtle llkes raspberry.
:52:19
But there's no dlfference.
:52:20
- It tastes dlfferent.
- And he's not programmed for taste.
:52:24
- It's programmed to learn.
- Not subjectlve preferences.
:52:27
He can analyze nutrltlonal values,
not choose between flavors.
:52:31
- So It's plcklng up behavlor patterns.
- Please, stop calllng hlm "It".
:52:35
Thank you.
:52:37
We've got to run some
blochemlcal tests,
:52:39
untll we flnd where thls comes from.
:52:41
Don't worry, Daryl,
you can't come to any harm.
:52:44
I promlse we won't hurt you.
:52:47
What are you gonna do?
:52:49
Why do you have to do thls?
:52:51
We're just gonna take some samples.
:52:55
You won't feel It.