OFF: Solaris
Eric Siegerman
erics at TELEPRES.COM
Tue Jan 14 17:40:17 EST 2003
On Thu, Jan 09, 2003 at 04:24:14PM +0000, M Holmes wrote:
> My solution was to have a
> human protagonist who is a detective, be called in to solve a murder on
> the alien planet.
Ender Wiggin, in Orson Scott Card's "Speaker for the Dead".
> He'd be unable to understand the alien thinking, but
> would be able, in a Holmesian way, to work it out, and thus solve the
> murder.
Well if you wrote it, it would perforce be Holmesian :-)
> So what I need is some peculiar breeding cycle of some organism which
> could be logically extrapolated through similar reasoning into an
> emotion in a sentient being which would be peculiar to understand but
> which could be rationally arrived at by examining the life cyycle or
> evolutionary history of the organism.
Some possibilities:
- Check out the title essay in Lewis Thomas's "The Medusa and the
Snail".
- There are insects, of course, but those have been rather done to
death. In this sort of way, though? I don't know.
Joe Haldeman brushed up against this in "The Forever War" -- I
can't remember now whether the Taurans really are insects, but
they certainly set priorities in a way I can imagine insects
doing.
So, for that matter, did Card in "Ender's Game". (Poor Ender
does keep getting himself written into these situations...)
- How about parthenogenesis? Relatedness would be binary --
everyone else would be either your twin/clone (100% shared
DNA), or completely unrelated (some smaller species-wide
shared baseline, but no greater than the rest of your
non-twins). And thus, no gradations of loyalty. The many
biologically-based loyalties/conflicts we manage to find in
family, clan, race, sex, etc., would be reduced to just one,
but an even more powerful one than most humans ever know --
you and your many twins vs. the rest of the species. Like the
Montague/Capulet feud on *serious* steroids.
(Reasoning: It's been observed that our notions of family
loyalty -- children, parents, siblings, and down through more
distant relatives, clan, tribe -- correlate remarkably closely
with amount of shared DNA -- children & parents 50%, siblings
25% I think, grandchildren, aunts & uncles & cousins rather
less, and so on. A couple doesn't have greater-than-baseline
shared DNA -- that incest-taboo thing :-) -- but your
childrens' other parent has a greater genetic stake than
anyone else in the kids' survival and future procreation, and
so presumably rides on the coattails of the 50% of DNA you
share with the kids...)
--
| | /\
|-_|/ > Eric Siegerman, Toronto, Ont. erics at telepres.com
| | /
Just Say No to the "faceless cannonfodder" stereotype.
- http://www.ainurin.net/ (an Orc site)
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