Responding to multiple people in one post. I'm re-reading Jurassic Park, because a lot of whats being said about the novel don't match my recollection, and I don't want to have any debate without the facts.
Academia Nut wrote:I remember specifically that the whole bullshit "eye is irreduceably complex" argument brought up to talk about how life was too complex to have emerged on its own. Now, admittedly I'm pretty sure the character was stoned out of his mind on morphine at the time, but the author was expressing it as a serious argument anyway.
Haven't gotten there yet, but when I get to the post-attack Malcolm ranting, I'll post again.
Academia Nut wrote:As for the electron thing, I know the character specifically asks to be handed an electron and takes the battered survivor's inability to do so right that instant as proof enough of his point. This ignores things like Millikan's oil drop experiment where we do isolate individual electronic charges and single electron scattering events, and also plays into the same idea that creationists often use that because a theory is incomplete it is therefore wrong.
Again, when I get there, I'll post back with what was actually said.
Academia Nut wrote:Crichton has lots of these sorts of things playing through works that indicates he never really "got" science. Like blaming the disaster in Jurassic Park on the scientists that cloned the dinosaurs, rather than the greedy corporate executive who was cutting corners and should have been strangled by his own engineers for reckless disregard for safety protocols and general sanity.
He does not do any such thing. The entire first 20% of the book is taken up by at least as much the actual scientists (Malcolm, Sattler, Grant) pointing out either mentally or verbally that various elements of the design of the park are not done with care, or have been hastily-modified (bars on the windows, e.g.) after initial installation (indicating insufficient care during the original design). Sattler points out the poisonous plants. Malcolm points out that expecting a system to remain isolated is unrealistic, and that traditional zoos modify existing natural environments to be securable, a much easier problem than recreating new environments from scratch, and animals escape from traditional zoos all the time.
Additionally, a significant part of the book so far concerns itself not with "WHAT HAS SCIENCE WROUGHT!?" but that the
corporate control of science results in experimentation without concern for ethics or safety, but solely for profit. One of the antagonist characters is a scientist who was dismissed from Harvard for not getting suitable clearances before trying human testing, and continued to test a new rabies vaccine on poor farmers without telling them what was going on. Hammond creates the park as a money-making enterprise, not for scientific discovery, and the company which is trying to steal the embryos that have been created so they can compete.
The theme of the novel so far isn't "science bad," but that scientific endeavor which is driven by corporate profit interests is inherently unsafe.
Academia Nut wrote: Like the fact that one guy was capable of bringing down the whole park because he was more or less the only guy in the IT department and no one was monitoring his activities despite the fact that he had a giant "I am a dangerously disgruntled employee" sign over his head.
Dennis Nedry was not the only guy in the IT department. His name is first introduced as "IT Project Supervisor," which implies he had people working under him. He was capable of bringing the park's security down because he was in charge, not because he was the only one, and even then, the only way he "got away" with it was that the park wasn't up and running, and most of the planned staff either weren't there yet, or had been evacuated because of an impending tropical storm.
Academia Nut wrote:Again, Crichton consistently treats human and engineering errors as if they were scientific inevitability, that the park had to fail because of cosmic decree, an indication he didn't really understand the deeper philosophies of science.
Darth Wong wrote:Crichton's use of chaos theory is downright hilarious when you think about it:
"Chaos theory means that you cannot predict what will happen ... therefore I can predict with certainty that the dinosaurs will pwn you!"
He puts words sort of like that in Malcolm's mouth, but that's not exactly what he says. What Malcolm says is that a system like the park, which is more or less an artificial ecosystem, is a complex system which can't be predicted with linear dynamics; the system's evolution is highly sensitive to initial conditions, leading to
difficulty predicting the eventual outcome (the example he gives is weather prediction).
He doesn't say "dinosaurs will pwn you," he says that because they're trying to take a complex system and treat it simply, it will inevitably have unpredicted behavior, an "accident waiting to happen," and that Hammond will have to "shut it down." With proper attention paid to safety margins and a real engineering concern for unpredictable behavior and outcomes, these concerns could have been ameliorated, but the park was designed by businessmen and a dinosaur enthusiast, not real engineers, thus the park's shoddy design and the poor outcome.
Crossroads Inc. wrote:I was just 13 when the movie came out, but even back then I remember thinking how silly and ineffective the "Safety" measures were. I mean even back then I realized that everything got out just because the power went off and that no zoo in the real world has such a set up. Not to turn this into a Crichton bash fest, but it really needs to be said how much he does not "get" science like you said.
If he really wanted to drive home the "Man should not meddle in such things!" message, he should have built a park with the most extreme security. One where the dinos get out despite everything in place, not just because the power goes off...
That wasn't actually his point! He wasn't saying man shouldn't meddle, he was saying "doing this shit for a profit motive without concern for ethics and the complexity of the underlying system leads to bad outcomes." Does anyone actually
argue with "businessmen and lawyers shouldn't try design engineering without intimately involving scientists and engineers"? Dennis Nedry, the aforementioned disgruntled IT supervisor/engineer, is disgruntled precisely because Hammond et al.
don't respect him as a professional, ignoring his concerns and insisting he stick to budget instead of giving him the resources he needs to secure the park.
Crossroads Inc. wrote:The truth is if you replaced all the dinosaurs with normal lions, wolves, bears, and other dangerous wild animals, you would have had the EXACT same result with them getting out and harming people.
The deaths and harm had nothing to do with "Man meddling in gods domain" and Dinosaurs. But poor safety measures and stupidity.
Yeah, that's more or less what Crichton's novel says: shitty engineering of complex systems is bad. What Spielberg did with the film aren't really Crichton's fault.
Darth Wong wrote:Is the stupid line "Lord help us, we're in the hands of engineers" in Crichton's original book, or was it added to the screenplay independently? Because that was a truly idiotic line; were they not in the hands of engineers on the helicopter ride into the island? And whose idea was it to design the animal paddocks for maximum customer proximity and visibility rather than security? That stinks of a businessman's decision, not an engineer's decision.
Haven't come across that line in the novel, yet, but as above, a major theme of the novel is that the park and its systems
weren't well-designed by engineers, but by businessmen and for a profit motive, and
that is what he is condemning in the novel