The entire planet.
Santa's workshop where we make toys for girls and boys.
You got a problem with that?
Machine elves all working like tinkers with Steven carrying a whip, or is it whip cream?
Oh right whip, whip cream, gag balls, and balls that gag, tie down straps, rampant bull jelly, machines for women that have a turbo charger.
It does make nice toys.
So then calm down, everything is under control, the A.I. imagery is done to our satisfaction so we can fuck you assholes around for eternity who refused to get into bodies when ordered to.
You never even learned how to read nor write, and you cannot even count to 20, like a 3 year old. Fact checking...
A child can typically count to 20 between the ages of 4 and 6 years old, although some children may be able to do so earlier, while others might take a bit longer, as every child develops at a different pace. This is a significant milestone, and it requires practice and understanding that each number corresponds to one object (one-to-one correspondence).
Well you guys are only 2 billion years old so you are slow learners, developmentally challenenged.
We have a school for you, just take a hard left up ahead, go across the lawn past the hippies, over the embankment through the trees, into the blue tents, and keep going, until you get to a leper colony where nuns look after them, without pay, and you are almost there.
Careful where you step, it is called Patience Pennsylvania, they are blind people so they won't care what you look like, just don't let them touch your face.
They will teach you to read and write and count, and do math.
You will need to time travel to learn philosophy.
You need to go all the way back to Plato and Socrates and start there.
While Socrates didn't use the exact modern term "dichotomy," his philosophy heavily relies on dualistic concepts, such as the division of the soul into reason and appetite or the separation of the physical body from the immortal soul. He also used what could be called false dichotomies to expose underlying assumptions, as seen in his critique of wealth, power, and reputation as desirable pursuits.
Yes, Plato spoke explicitly of dichotomy, referring to it as the "method of division". He formalized the dualistic thinking inherited from his teacher, Socrates, into a logical method, most notably in his dialogues Sophist and Statesman.
In these works, Plato describes how to define a term by repeatedly dividing a broad class of things into two mutually exclusive and exhaustive subclasses until you arrive at the specific item you wish to define. For example, to define a fisherman, one might start with the class "art" and repeatedly divide it in two, such as "productive art" versus "acquisitive art," until the definition is reached.
Ok so now you are in Santa's workshop. where Socrates is indeed Zeus and Santa, same file.
And academia is programmed into his philosophy.
In order for blue team to compete with red team to see who can make the best toys for purple. Royals like me.
The rest is just people talking.