Miévillians discussion
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SECTION 7: Part 8: The Parley and Part 9: The Relief
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Cecily wrote: "Talking of religious faith and what might prevent belief, I came across this extraordinary article today (not that I agree with it, or am suggesting it's a common opinion):http://www.hurriyetdaily..."
How incredibly offensive...
I wonder which specific belief they brainwash them into? There is, of course, lots to choose from.
Cecily quoted: 'The head of Adana’s Health and Education Associations for Autistic Children reportedly said autistic children were “atheists due to a lack of a section for faith in their brains.”'I so love junk science. Even if we are to accept that statement as given - though I rather suspect that it was a hypothesis, rather than anything as rigorous as a theory - who's to say that 'lack of faith', rather than 'presence of faith', is the pathological condition?
Ian wrote: "I wonder if they could turn kids into similes and metaphors as an alternative?"But... I don't want to be a simile; I want to be a metaphor!
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Derek wrote: " who's to say that 'lack of faith', rather than 'presence of faith', is the pathological condition?"
I think belief in something is intrinsic to humans; where this guy goes wrong is the assumption that belief in god(s) specifically must therefore be the norm.
The term "autism " throws a very wide blanket, but mainly implies the lack of an ability to form close emotional relationships with other people. I know of many atheists who most definitely do not conform to those criteria.The strict definition per Wikipedia: " Autism is a highly variable neurodevelopmental disorder[17] that first appears during infancy or childhood, and generally follows a steady course without remission.[18] Overt symptoms gradually begin after the age of six months, become established by age two or three years,[19] and tend to continue through adulthood, although often in more muted form.[20] It is distinguished not by a single symptom, but by a characteristic triad of symptoms: impairments in social interaction; impairments in communication; and restricted interests and repetitive behavior. Other aspects, such as atypical eating, are also common but are not essential for diagnosis.[21] Autism's individual symptoms occur in the general population and appear not to associate highly, without a sharp line separating pathologically severe from common traits."
Traveller wrote: "...I wonder which specific belief they brainwash them into? There is, of course, lots to choose from"As it's in Turkey, I expect Islam is the most likely candidate, though I don't imagine it's a mainstream Islamic belief.
Derek wrote: "...who's to say that 'lack of faith', rather than 'presence of faith', is the pathological condition? "
Ha! Good point!
I think we may be in danger of taking one person's very warped views too seriously. I posted it because the timing of my seeing it tied in with this, and because I was so flabbergasted.
Nataliya wrote: "But... I don't want to be a simile; I want to be a metaphor!"I don't want to be like a simile;
I want to be a human metaphor!
Though exaggeration and hyperbole
Are unacceptable to my editor
She thinks I'd make a great figure of speech
Perhaps a catchy idiom and/or
A nice example of synechdoche,
Innuendo or non sequitur.
Cecily wrote: "As it's in Turkey, I expect Islam is the most likely candidate, though I don't imagine it's a mainstream Islamic belief."Probably more importantly, this was a statement from a civil servant in a country that is still, despite considerable pressure from islamists, determinedly politically secular. I suspect holding such opinions is at least career-limiting.
Ian wrote: "Nataliya wrote: "But... I don't want to be a simile; I want to be a metaphor!"I don't want to be like a simile;
I want to be a human metaphor!
Though exaggeration and hyperbole
Are unacceptable ..."
Love it, Ian!
Thank you very much for this thread, it has helped me very much. I have finished the book and liked it a lot. Not just because of the linguistic plays or the realistic alien depiction, but mostly because it was a very entertaining book. I just wish Miéville could write a sequel and show us more about the immer...
I suspect he won't write a sequel, as such, but I wouldn't be terribly surprised if he writes something else set in that universe. Certainly, the immer was not developed nearly as far as it could be.


Brilliant!