Nick wrote:Patrick Degan wrote:You are being deliberately obtuse. You actually believe that the difficulty of communication can justify a fundamentally immoral action?
If the party I am trying to establish communication with is actively attempting to kill me? Yes. Despite your efforts to deny it, it
is analagous to the policeman confronted by the maniac armed with the gun. The policeman knows that if they shoot, the maniac is likely to die. If they charge in for hand to hand, they're likely to get shot themselves and achieve nothing. If they hesitate too long, someone else might die. They've yelled at the guy to put the gun down, and been ignored. So they shoot - and perhaps the maniac dies. They wish they had a stun gun or something. But a firearm was all they had, so the maniac - who might have been curable - is now dead.
You can keep bringing up this old saw as many times as you like, and it still amounts to a bullshit false analogy. Killing a maniac who is trying to kill me would
not subsequently entitle me to ensure that I will be safe by annihilating the maniac's entire family and all his friends. Evidently, you've never heard of the concept of "proportionality of response".
Ender's Game is the above scenario writ large - instead of a cop and a maniac with a gun, you have humans and Buggers. The cop decided that in order to preserve his existence, and the existence of the people he is meant to protect, he had to shoot (and likely kill) the maniac. The human military, for various reasons, decided that the only effective means to defend humanity was to destroy the Bugger homeworld.
Sure. I'm shot at by a criminal lunatic, and this entitles me to then go on to exterminate not only the perp but his entire family and all his friends, and everybody in his neighbourhood as well. I can just conduct a wholesale massacre simply to ensure my perception of safety. That is, unless it's considered that I've just committed mass-murder far beyond any conceivably justifiable response in proportion to the initial threat. That's more the analogy you're reaching for, even though you don't realise it.
Was their assumption right? As it turns out, no - the Buggers were willing to communicate. But it is like the situation with the cop discovering the maniac had run out of bullets - information discovered after a decision made under time pressure, does not affect the correctness of the earlier decision.
Except the cop isn't faced with a situation where a time-lag of decades exists between action A and action B. But humanity and the Buggers are. Decades provides time for communication and alternatives. The threat is not immediate by any stretch of the imagination and certainly does not justify a genocidal counteraction.
It is entirely possible that the military of Ender's Game made the wrong call - but it is easy to make that judgment with the benefit of the omniscient third party or the historical viewpoint. If you were in that situation, with the information they had, can you really say they were completely unjustified in what they did?
They had decades to make their decisions, and were not faced with the immediate arrival of the entire war machine of the Buggers on their doorstep. There was no immediate threat of annihilation in force.
Patrick Degan wrote:In other words, there's no reason to even make the attempt, so let's just kill them all. I will ask you again: what is there about contact based upon mathematics which would be impossible for an alien race to comprehend? And nobody has said that the Earth military should not continue defensive preparations to meet the oncoming warfleet. Or is it your proposition that the attempt to establish communication is mutually exclusive to the defence effort?
No, I am assuming that the effort had
already been made, when they were first confonted by the Bugger warships. Isn't trying to establish communication the
first thing you would try?
So because attempt A fails, that means you never make attempt B or any subsequent attempts —you just go right to playing the genocide card.
Try reading Joe Haldeman's
The Forever War. Not only does he deal with some of these same issues as in EG, he does so far more intelligently.
If the buggers were interested in communicating, don't you think they would have stood off a bit, and tried to establich communication on their own? If they were interested in co-habitation, don't you think they might have spotted something and left us alone?
Do I have to remind you yet again of the plot of the novel you're so vigorously defending? The Buggers did not sense intelligence on our part because they received no telepathic signal. They didn't think they were dealing with an intelligent race (and again, never mind the ludicrous number of implausibilities inherent in Card's premise). The war, in essence, was the result of a mistake. The Hive Queen herself admits this to Ender.
Patrick Degan wrote:In other words, plausibility and plot-logic are not actually requirements for good writing. It's not actually necessary for Orson Scott Card to consider how idiotic a notion it is to posit an alien species which develops spacefaring technology without ever stumbling upon the invention of radio and radar.
How idiotic a notion is it to posit ships that can travel faster than light? Or instantaneous communication across the galaxy? These things are called
plot devices. They exist to make the plot work the way the author wants it to - not because they match real-life physics.
What a pathetic argument. Yes, we have "plot devices". Yes, we employ "suspension of disbelief". This does NOT relieve the requirement for plausibility or internal self-consistency in the plot. These points are why, among many reasons, that BragaTrek™ finds itself under continual attack for stupidities such as "deuterium ore" or "cracks" in a black hole's event horizon. There's suspension of disbelief and there's utter bullshit.
OSC's physics is self-consistent, but frequently differs from real-world physics in key areas (ala Star Wars hyperdrive).
Never mind that it asks us to swallow the ludicrous notion of a science which can develop space travel and nuclear fusion propulsion but somehow miss out on investigation and exploitation of the electromagnetic spectrum along the way.
The requirement is for self-consistency, not for actual real world physics. We just assume that real-world physics holds unless the author presents a plot device which clearly contradicts that concept (e.g. Star Wars hyperdrive & hypermatter)
The requirement for self-consistency applies to plot logic and plausibility. You have yet to outline a course of scientific development which leads to space travel and nuclear rocketry but bypasses the development of radio. That simply does not make sense on any level.
I'm trying to figure out why you are so vehement in attacking the book - notice the question mark?
Gee, stupid plot, plausibility holes you can fly whole warfleets through, and a very questionable moral premise. Am I going too fast for you?
Of course, I can ask the opposite question as to your vehemence in defending the book, can't I?
I'm defending the justifiable xenocide issue completely separate from the book issue - I happen to think that it is remotely conceivable that humanity may encounter a situation where carrying out xenocide is an option which must be considered (I hope that we never confront such a choice - but I'm willing to speculate about the possbility that we might).
No, you're simply dancing around the uglier implications of the alledged principle you're trying to validate.
I defend the book because it is an interesting exploration of the concatenation of circumstance which might be needed to bring that situation about. Not to mention being a damn fine book.
Well, there's no accounting for taste.
And with that, I shall resume this exchange at a later hour.