Talk:Daodan: Difference between revisions
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;converting the survivors into genetically clean and better humans. (übermensch, eh??? ''geyser'') | ;converting the survivors into genetically clean and better humans. (übermensch, eh??? ''geyser'') |
Revision as of 21:04, 19 February 2009
- converting the survivors into genetically clean and better humans. (übermensch, eh??? geyser)
- The accent here is on "survivors". Let me try a more or less fitting (spontaneous) analogy.
- Before the Industrial Revolution, farmers used to thrash the corn by hand and then they had to separate the corn from the hulls.
- "Die Spreu vom Weizen trennen." When thrown in the air, the hulls were blown away by the wind. In Oni we have a "Sturm"...
- Now we could imagine what people are going to think. Nobody knows whether he's the corn or the hulls.
- (logical link???) So, I think that the Syndicate wouldn't admit the Daodan's true potential - genetically speaking.
- (logical link???) And even if the survivors will become "Übermenschen". What is it worth if their minds are altered/corrupted?
- paradox-01
- My "übermensch" comment was a little gratuitous; I was ranting on the overused neonazi formalism.
- I didn't object to anything in particular, which is probably why your response is very messy, too.
- Daodan is most definitely "boundless", and potentially superhuman (unless you make up bounds).
- In that respect, anti-eugenism propaganda would make sense, regardless of Nietzsche and Hitler.
- geyser 11:11, 10 October 2007 (CEST)
- The Syndicate would indeed have less trouble concealing the Daodan's potential than Hasegawa had.
- After all, the pre-Muro Syndicate actually needed (or thought they needed) a Universal Soldier.
- The people in the aftermath just "don't wanna die", so what they need is a resilience patch.
- If there is no anti-Daodan propaganda, you might sell the Daodan as "just" a resilience patch.
- However, the motivation and feasibility of "Daodan to the people" is not obvious.
- And it would take only a few serious opponents to spoil the appeal of the Daodan.
- The alienation issue complements the "sorta eugenism" and makes the Daodan taboo.
- geyser 11:11, 10 October 2007 (CEST)
- "Die Spreu vom Weizen trennen" seems to be a German-only analogy: I've never heard of it.
- Correct me if I'm wrong, but it's mostly about "natural selection": survival at any cost.
- If the survivors let their "leaders" decide who'll be saved, they're giving their lives away.
- Some of them might play that Survivor game and try their best to be "selected" for salvation.
- Others will draw their strength from the fact that they don't need miracles to stay alive.
- Your reaction up there is not too structured, but I guess we're talking of the same things.
- Distributing the Daodan in any form will complicate the issue of survival, not solve it.
- There's the fear of alienation, and there's the horror of "putting one's soul up for sale".
- geyser 11:11, 10 October 2007 (CEST)
- how many [Daodan] do you think they have??? and how can they "distribute" matching clones to total strangers???
- At least enough for themselves. Let's say half a million (distributed all over the world). If they are willing to distribute, "Beta Daodan" comes to mind again.
- My idea of the Daodan is that it has a "genetic concept" for self-improvement and doesn't depend on "minor" differences in the DNA. (At least it was developed for a human DNA.)
- paradox-01
- Hm, "the Chrysalis is the hyperevolved clone of its host body". Generic, really?
- The Prime Chrysalises were "based on the genetic codes of [Mai] and [Muro]": generic?
- A "generic" Daodan would be nice, but it would be a major improvement over the Primes.
- But then you'd want that generic thing to be somehow inferior to the Primes (Beta). Äh?
- All in all, you're saying that the Syndicate has completely instrumentalized the Daodan.
- That's not too likely, given that every symbiote is basically unique and unpredictable.
- It's also a regrettable waste of a perfectly good "autoevolutionary machine" concept.
- The Daodan is nice if it's uncontrollable and a bit mystical (trap; Pandora's box).
- You're devaluating it if you make it into an instrumental, versatile gadget. IMO.
- geyser 11:11, 10 October 2007 (CEST)
- As far as I can tell, the development cycle of (Prime) Chrysalises is as follows.
- Stem cells from the host are exposed to a hyperevolution factor (details unknown).
- This hyperevolved clone is grown over a few days/weeks/months, closely monitored.
- The "Chrysalis" (basically, a small tumor) is then implanted back into the host.
- Then the tumor assimilates and upgrades the genetically compatible host, in-place.
- A possible improvement could be that the clone is grown without human monitoring.
- Such a "Daodan kit" (syringe + "lab on a chip") would still be high-tech, though.
- You could give away a few of those to rich survivors (Muro's supposed ultimatum).
- But it's not something that can be mass-produced and distributed to the public IMO.
- (it also depends a lot on what the factor of hyperevolution is... is it rare?)
- Of course, this is totally off-topic here... We could move that to Talk:Daodan.
- geyser 11:11, 10 October 2007 (CEST)
- The Prime Chrysalises were "based on the genetic codes of [Mai] and [Muro]": generic?
- Like I said before: My idea is that Hasegawa and Kerr discovered a "genetic concept" for self-improvment [=generic] (and not a factor, so it cannot be rare). But this "proto structure" is nothing without an host.
- Kerr said: "The Chrysalis is the hyper-evolved clone of its host body."
- (Didn't you said the same by your-self? "The "Chrysalis" (basically, a small tumor) is then implanted back into the host."
- So the Chrysalis is "an upgrade plus the host DNA", IMO.
- Paradox-01 20:20, 17 October 2007 (CEST)
All in all, you're saying that the Syndicate has completely instrumentalized the Daodan.
- Well... What the Syndicate want and what they get is not the same. Because of the lack of time the Beta-Chrysalis won't be an option (maybe for very less people like testers but nothing more). But later ... is too late.
- Paradox-01 20:20, 17 October 2007 (CEST)