But then it gradually turned into, "yep, god did it. End of story." Too easy and too pat and all around unsatisfying.
Sorry, but it was still plenty ambiguous at the end as far as I am concerned.
Moderator: NecronLord
But then it gradually turned into, "yep, god did it. End of story." Too easy and too pat and all around unsatisfying.
I enjoy the occasional rant. It's a guilty pleasure.Thanas wrote:Geez, Starglider. Bitter much?
I don't think Moore had any sort of 'agenda'. Most TV shows don't. The writers just pick a set of themes which they think viewers will like. Most viewers like to cheer humans over aliens, and human values over alien values.I am pretty sure that Transhumanism was not on Moore's agenda at all.
Uploading, full organism genetic engineering and cybernetics are all integral parts of the setting. Most space opera series virtually ignore them (e.g. Trek, where they turn up in the odd episode as villains to be defeated). If there were more positive examples to balance out all the eeeevil transhumanists I would be less annoyed, but frankly it's hard to think of any positive examples at all in televised sci-fi.I mean, when did it ever play a real role in the show?
If you want you can dismiss every single bit of sci-fi in BSG as window dressing on a soap opera, but the themes are there and influence people's opinions regardless.Transhumanism is not the focal point of BSG.
Except the humanform Cylons were not transhumans. They were manufactured human replicants who happen to look human and were designed to fool medical scanners. They cannot reproduce (one fluke does not demonstrate a real ability), they do not grow up but were formed at adult age, the list could go on and on.Starglider wrote:
Uploading, full organism genetic engineering and cybernetics are all integral parts of the setting. Most space opera series virtually ignore them (e.g. Trek, where they turn up in the odd episode as villains to be defeated). If there were more positive examples to balance out all the eeeevil transhumanists I would be less annoyed, but frankly it's hard to think of any positive examples at all in televised sci-fi.
He was refering to Cavil.Except the humanform Cylons were not transhumans.
I don't think so- isn't most of the modification done by tinkering with puberty and the like?Wouldnt the Masterchief of Halo be considered a transhuman hero? Its not a normal human under the suit but one that has been improved in multiple areas.
How was the end ambiguous?Zac Naloen wrote:Sorry, but it was still plenty ambiguous at the end as far as I am concerned.But then it gradually turned into, "yep, god did it. End of story." Too easy and too pat and all around unsatisfying.
How is Cavil any different? He was manufactured like the rest. The main problem being that while the Five built decent bodies for the humanforms they failed miserably in creating personalities unless those were supplied by the toasters.Samuel wrote:He was refering to Cavil.Except the humanform Cylons were not transhumans.
I don't think so- isn't most of the modification done by tinkering with puberty and the like?Wouldnt the Masterchief of Halo be considered a transhuman hero? Its not a normal human under the suit but one that has been improved in multiple areas.
Stofsk wrote:How was the end ambiguous?Zac Naloen wrote:Sorry, but it was still plenty ambiguous at the end as far as I am concerned.But then it gradually turned into, "yep, god did it. End of story." Too easy and too pat and all around unsatisfying.
That isn't even the point, is it? The heart of the matter is it's just a massive copout.Zac Naloen wrote:I missed the part where they outright said, psst this is definitely the Judeo Christian God.
It really wasn't though, was it?That it was the monotheistic Christian God is pretty much implied though.
Well this goes back to, humans forgetting what the hell they did wrong in the first place.Zac Naloen wrote:As far as I can tell his plan keeps going wrong because humans keep wiping each other out.
Then he went about it in a completely asinine way. Why couldn't the angels simply have contacted someone else other than Gaius freakin' Baltar? Like Lee Adama, before he had his insane luddite idea of teaching tribal primitives "the best parts of ourselves"?Zac Naloen wrote: As far as I can tell his plan keeps going wrong because humans keep wiping each other out.
Harvey Six: "Let a complex system repeat itself long enough, eventually something surprising might occur. That, too, is in God's plan."
Harvey Gaius: "You know he doesn't like that name. Silly me. Silly, silly me."
That little bit at the end there just told me that all of this was an ant farm and God or whatever actually didnt care one way or another how things turned out.Zac Naloen wrote:All the stuff about how God loves them from Ellen and the other cylons very much struck me as her belief system only. He frankly, obviously doesn't give a shit about them as individuals.
Harvey Six: "Let a complex system repeat itself long enough, eventually something surprising might occur. That, too, is in God's plan."
Harvey Gaius: "You know he doesn't like that name. Silly me. Silly, silly me."
You mean this conversation?
I hadn't noticed that bit where he chastises himself. I wonder if the two Angels are actually one person.
Yeah, the writers.Anguirus wrote:^ When did the open-ended-ness get lost? I mean, of the two angels, one of them acts like an atheist himself. And Adama, the central character of the show, is always an atheist, and the only thing he admits to is "something powerful and wacky is going on behind the scenes." Which was frankly obvious.