The movie "Inception," I've never seen it but it comes up in a lot of pop culture references. If you've seen the movie, What is their definition of the word "Inception?"
from LemmyKnowsBest@lemmy.world to nostupidquestions@lemmy.ca on 12 Dec 2023 00:45
https://lemmy.world/post/9459629

Based on why I’ve heard it seems they use the word to be a synonym of the word “paradox” (?)

But according to the dictionary, inception means commencement or beginning or initiation.

What is their definition of the word “Inception” in the movie?

#nostupidquestions

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dragontamer@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 2023 00:47 next collapse

Planting an idea so deep into someone else’s brain, that they themselves believe they were the ones who came up with that idea.

Which is actually a pretty basic psychology and most adults have the capability of doing this to other people. But in the movie, they use super-tech / dreams-within-a-dream stuff to do this effect.

Moobythegoldensock@lemm.ee on 12 Dec 2023 15:58 collapse

To be fair, in real life you would do this by building a rapport and slowly introducing an idea over time. In the movie, they were trying to do it in a very short time while also hiding the fact that their targets had met them in the real world, and it’s heavily implied that ideas planted in this manner were far more unshakable than those planted by normal methods.

wolframhart@lemmy.today on 12 Dec 2023 00:48 next collapse

I think…. And its been a long time… that inception refers to implanting the beginnings of an idea into the mind of some of the characters in the story

mateomaui@reddthat.com on 12 Dec 2023 01:01 next collapse

It’s a good movie, totally worth watching.

JackDark@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 2023 01:04 next collapse

The comments about planting ideas in someone’s mind are correct to the plot of the movie, but most of the time I have seen Inception referenced in popular culture it has been to simply say “something inside of that same thing”. It’s like the Xhibit (no idea how the rapper actually spells his name, but I think that’s right) meme: “Yo dawg, I heard you like _____ so I put _____ in your _____ so you can _____ while you _____.”

This is because in the movie, they travel into dreams within dreams.

jrbaconcheese@yall.theatl.social on 12 Dec 2023 01:37 next collapse

I think you’ve got it. The “Inception” in the title is the idea-implanted but the major plot device is a dream-within-a-dream-within-a-dream…

kakes@sh.itjust.works on 12 Dec 2023 02:36 next collapse

Yep, it refers (loosely) to a fractal.

edgemaster72@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 2023 02:46 collapse

For you or anyone that’s curious, it’s Xzibit (a bit more phonetic than your guess which was probably close enough that anyone who knows, knows who/what you meant)

Hildegarde@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 2023 02:42 next collapse

Inception was the movie that popularized movie trailers that went BWAAAAAAAAAA.

It’s a sci-fi action movies where they try to put memories into people’s dreams.

The movie has scenes that take place within dreams, and dreams within dreams, and making the audience unsure if this is a dream or not.

People using the word inception are referencing that from the move. Often the nested realities thing within another thing part.

NAXLAB@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 2023 16:39 collapse

Not seeing a straightforward and true answer here so:

In the movie, they go into deeper and deeper layers of dreams within dreams. So the term “inception” came to mean things inside other things. Like if there was a lake on island on a lake, which in turn was on an island on yet another lake, you could call it lake-ception.