That's a little like saying that using a telephone will invariably be clearer than shouting across a backyard. As anyone who has used a telephone knows, sometimes there's interference or a bad connection or whatever, in which case you might be better off yelling out the bad door to communicate with a neighbor than phoning that person. Again, why the assumption that telepathy will always be clearer than verbal communication? What if anything more than the most very basic of concepts required extensive training to communicate mind to mind, and for most people verbal communication remained the medium of choice for communicating?Darth Wong wrote:I need no such assumption. Even if you can continue to lie and deceive psychically, you can still communicate more clearly. Most of our communication problems in relationships do not stem from an outright intent to lie, but from the clumsiness of our communication methods. We have trouble expressing how we feel, what's really on our minds, etc.Broomstick wrote:Not if the two parties can lie and deceive. Why the assumption that brain to brain communication won't involve that capability?Darth Wong wrote:No. It is hardly a secret that communication is the key to a better relationship.
And if the extent of a baby's psychic abilities (by which you apparently mean just telepathy) is simply a deafening/overpowering carrier wave with no meaning attached? The equivalent of a feedback squeal on a microphone? What good is it then? Just as language doesn't emerge fully developed why would telepathy? Is it inconceivable that such a person would go through a developmental stage where they could make psychic noise but not actually be able to communicate meaning?Adults have complex communication skills, but that doesn't mean emotions are meaningless or incomprehensible to them. It would be nice to know what a baby's cries mean, for example. That doesn't mean I'm expecting him to communicate complex thoughts, for fuck's sake. It means I want to know whether he's in pain, whether he's just lonely, etc. The ability to interpret communication would be immensely enhanced with psychic abilities.
Mike, I am not making that assumption, the AUTHOR is! These are not MY books. It would be dishonest to describe them in false terms, yet you are blaming me for the flaws in someone else's works IF you're going to take a shit on the ideas - which you are certainly allowed to do - have the decency to say THE AUTHOR'S assumptions are shit, as they are not mine.I don't care how long ago you read it. Your assumptions are based on the conventions of woo-woo fiction and do not in any way follow logically from the situation being discussed. There is absolutely no reason whatsoever to leap from "psychic" to telekinetic except that both of them tend to coincide in woo-woo fiction.
In the books they actually do not do this - psychic abilities exist in varying degrees and the reason these people are so powerful is due to an artificial breeding program spanning generations. The traits crop up randomly in the population and, when weak, do not overly interfere with producing children. When they are concentrated through multiple generations to deliberately strengthen the traits THEN you have the problems, and the stronger the psychic the worse the problems.As for the evolutionary science, no. The idea that this trait would spring up as an on/off trait is absurd. If it's possible, it would be present in varying degrees. You wouldn't have infants who suddenly have monstrously powerful psychic abilities whereas no one in their family line prior to them had such abilities.
If it doesn't work for you then it doesn't work for you. I just thought it was a different twist on the problem.The subject of this thread is believability, remember?The author put in all the other stuff, not me. Would her books have been better if she hadn't? I don't know, it would make for very different stories
Yes, for the particular people in the story they can't live in multi-generation households. The normal humans in the books can. One of the points is that these psychic people are different than the rest of humanity.I don't give a fuck about the author; I'm only going by what you said about these stories, particularly the bit about how multiple generations can't live under the same roof, as if that isn't common in real life in many cultures right now.So, on the basis of three books of fiction you're making personal assumptions about the author, such as "she has a problem with children"? She wrote a lot of books, and they certainly aren't all "kid-hating" books. Don't mistake the story for the author.
And while many human societies live in multi-generational households it's by no means a human universal. You can argue that an inability or unwillingness to live in such households is anti-survival, but again one of the features of the books is that these people have trouble successfully reproducing.
Not "instant-on" - the traits appear randomly in the general population, too, but not in their strongest form. It's only inbreeding that creates the really powerful individuals. A small dose of some of these abilities might have some survival value after all, although that is not explored in the books.Again, based on this "instant-on" appearance of fantastic new evolutionary traits which is, itself, an idiotic fiction cliche and butchery of biology.
Well, like I said, Mike, if you don't like it blame the author, not me.Again, that sounds more like irritating fiction cliche than realism. It's like saying that a person with a sense of smell wouldn't be able to distinguish between his own smells and the smells emanating from others, until he gets trained or something.
Yes, Mike, I have. While babies certainly can generate a horrible stench at times they do not do so continuously, and most of time I wouldn't even call it nauseating. Sure, shit filled diapers smell bad, but they don't (usually) make me retch. I was thinking more along the lines of children randomly and frequently, even constantly, emitting odors that make an adult dry-heave or actually puke. It would certainly complicate child care, don't you think?They do. Haven't you ever had a baby around you?Well, let's think about that for a minute, Mike.It's like a person with no sense of smell imagining that people with a sense of smell would never be able to live together because they would occasionally smell each others' bowel movements, flatulence, or body odour.
What if human offspring involuntarily emitted nauseating odors until maturity?
Well, I thought the notion that "makes it difficult to reproduce" as an explanation for why psychics aren't more common was a nod at trying to explain why they're so rare that makes some sense. You may not agree with the proposed mechanism of why that's so, but it having a trait that is beneficial to the individual yet decreases reproductive fitness is a real-world explanation for why a trait might be rare in a population. It's believable to me. There's a lot of other stuff in those books that are pure fantasy, sure, but that part struck me as a better attempt to explain why psychics don't dominate the planet than most.Unless this "different twist" is somehow useful when discussing whether certain fiction cliches are believable or not, then it's irrelevant.