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Eight Minds, Six Questions — Part 1B question 4-6:

This experiment explores how eight independent AI systems interpret the same scientific idea. UCTiT-UCP v4.0, a framework that treats coherence as both a physical and informational law.

Each model received the same short document and six identical questions. The goal isn’t to crown a “best” answer, but to see how different reasoning architectures converge or diverge when confronted with a unified theory of coherence.

Understanding how AIs read theory helps reveal whether coherence itself is intuitive — not only to humans, but to the machines we build.

> To start, below are the unedited replies, shown exactly as Gemini produced them.

The following eight AI systems participated in this comparative study:

GPT-5, Gemini, Claude, Grok, Perplexity, DeepSeek, Le Chat, and Copilot.

Each received the same document, prompt, and question.

> Reflection

The differences in phrasing and focus highlight how each system frames the “problem” that UCTiT seeks to solve — from bridging gaps in physics to unifying time, information, and consciousness.

Together they show how a single coherent document can evoke diverse yet overlapping interpretations of what reality might be.

Prompt Used for These Questions:

Before answering, each model was instructed to identify itself by name, keep responses under 200 words, and avoid mathematics or technical equations.

UCTiT – UCP v4.0 Multi-AI Interview Prompt (Part 1):

> Before we begin, please state your model name clearly on the first line (for example: “GPT-5” or “Gemini”).

Do not describe your specs or capabilities — just your name.

You are part of a comparative study on how different AI systems interpret the document UCTiT – UCP v4.0: The Physical and Empirical Framework by Ryan Lane.

You’ll be asked six short questions about it.

Your answers should be concise, neutral, and under 200 words each (enough to fit about 20 lines on a ChatGPT screen).

Avoid mathematics or technical equations.

Focus on meaning and interpretation in clear, everyday language.

When you are ready to receive the document, simply say “Ready.”

I will then provide the document text.

After you’ve received it, you’ll answer the first question:

Oct 23
at
1:58 PM

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