Oh boy oh boy, buckle up because this is gonna be a wild one.
So, right off the bat you have the title, “world.execute(me);”, it's something you'd put in a command bar so it gives you the desired output.
What you can deduct from this is that the command is meant to run some sort of program named "me". In other words, it's a command made to make the speaker actually get out there and get shit done, the drive to get out of bed and live life.
Moving onto the first few verses,
If you couldn't tell, those are all alluding to sex. They're referencing it in the most machine-like way possible, it doesn't consider the relationship that led to this, it doesn't consider any feelings involved. And well, I suppose it fits the theme of the song, seeing as what we've seen about it so far is a song about machines and love.
Here things start getting quirkier, as the speaker (or the machine) begins to have a shallow understanding of feelings, it's starting to understand why people do what they do when they're in love, it's not just out of pure instinct to reproduce for survival, it goes deeper than that.
BUT despite its best efforts the machine can only compare it to things such as math and geometry. Those are the only things a machine can understand by nature after all: Numbers, series of "Yes"es and "No"s.
At this point the machine starts enjoying the fuzzy, warm feeling of both loving, and being loved, so it (innocently) starts devoting itself to whoever, or whatever, it loves, it wants more of that feeling, why wouldn't it?
You could even interpret the latter part of this section as some sort of obsession or addiction, as the machine starts saying things such as "give you all the stimulations" and "be your only satisfaction" as well as being "trapped" in a "simulation" the machine seemed to once control.
Here we can see that the machine starts talking about more abstract things, they start talking about the purring of a cat, solely for enjoyment, about genders, about religion. Those are almost entirely of human nature, it's not something you can mathematically quantify.
All while keeping the same obsessive tone, with all of the crazy devotion and addiction we've seen before.
After this point in the song it's revealed that the speaker was left alone, maybe due to their excessive devotion and obsession with the relationship, who knows. And thus they start to miss that warm, fuzzy feeling of both loving, and being loved.
They start talking about "challenging a god" and "making illegal arguments" like it's some sort of unforgivable sin. Sounds like gaslighting to me, which i'm assuming the speaker starts using in desperation, seeing as their lover is no longer on their side.
Maybe things like THIS were why they were left behind, after all the speaker is still a machine at heart, to some degree. And machines lack morals.
After all that's happened, the machine can't let go, they just need to feel loved again. Once you get a taste you won't want to let go of it.
Once again we go back to the whole execution thing, which leads me to believe they're desperately trying to go back and fix their mistakes, the machine NEEDS to go back and be forgiven so they can feel loved.
Here the machine goes back once again to trying to quantify love, to trying to treat it as a number when it is something much, much more abstract.
And not only that, the machine also admits that it is not both it and its lover who are "trapped", its lover is free, the machine is the one trapped in the past.
And as the song is about to end, after a fairly lengthy break filled with nothing but silence, there is one last line to be heard:
The machine says so as the text reading "world.execute(me);" scrolls upwards on the screen, after which the song dies out completely.
The "executing" here isn't about a computer running a program.
It's about suicide.