SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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Blindsight
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"Blindsight" Discuss Everything *Spoilers*
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The author is a biologist (a marine biologist) and created an astonishing backstory to how the vampires were discovered to be an extinct human subspecies by an amoral Big Pharma research effort (one slogan is "Flexible ethics for a complex world"), and subsequently recreated, as seen in the book.
Watts did a forty-minute PowerPoint presentation posing as a representative of the FizerPharm research group. It's available on YouTube here: Vampires: Biology and Evolution by Peter Watts. (The original, at Watts' website, requires a Flash plugin, which was officially discontinued at the end of 2020.)
I don't believe the origin story of the vampire lineage is much of a spoiler, although it has been quite a few years since I read the book, so maybe I'm wrong.
But it is a delightfully subversive presentation, which will feel all too true to those who mistrust Big Pharma today, and will still be snarkily amusing to pretty much everyone else except for Pfizer's lawyers. Closing slide:





But I think the point was that, despite obviously being 'intelligent', Rorschach wasn't intelligent, but instead a very very complex Chinese Room, as the crew had guessed (and as Rorschach almost simultaneously guessed the crew had guessed).


enjoyed how the plot and action were kept moving, even with the volume and variety of scientific concepts
interesting for me that despite Siri essentially having been custom made to interpret events and the crew and communicate back to the Earth, he should be an ideal narrator, but turns out to be highly unreliable

Without getting too much in the weeds on the definition of intelligence, Rorshach wasn't sentient. The Turing Test and later the refinement of the Chinese Room were ways to try and answer the question of telling a true intelligence from just a really good computer. At that point in time, intelligence would have included sentience as part of the definition.
I think one of the things the book challenges is whether that definition is sufficient to use to assign value to lives. Is it okay to torture or injure the scramblers, as the crew does, because they don't have any conscious experience of pain?

1. Watts wanted the book to have an extra creeepy element
2. (My favorite) The vampire is there as an extreme example of a leader who regards all of his underlings as meat and ulitmately expendable. Acomplishing the mission is the only goal.
3. Vampires are smarter/faster/stronger but still went extinct so maybe it is a representation of "The meek shall inherit the Earth" and humans are actually destined to follow (go extinct)

1. Watts wanted the book to have an extra creeepy element
2. (My favorite) The vampire is there as an extreme example of a leader who regards all of his..."
liking #2
for me #3, felt the author hinted that humanity's ascendancy as a fluke aberration, perhaps soon to be corrected


I think it's the first two, plus a bit more. The main philosophical question posed by the book is whether sentience and empathy are actually negative traits when it comes to survival of a species. Sarasti is an example of someone who is a sociopath (i.e. lacking empathy) because it evolved as a necessary trait for an obligate carnivore who essentially feeds on their own kind. There is also some discussion about how many CEOs and other people in leadership positions show sociopathic tendencies, so I think this supports your reason number 2 for having him there.
As for the third reason, it's strongly suggested that the vampires have completely taken over earth at the end. The only reason they initially went extinct is the right angle glitch, and example of something that was only an evolutionary disadvantage once unnatural constructions started to be created by people. Once they can suppress that, the meek just become food (as Andy basically said).
I also liked how the vampire genetics were used to solve the problem of extended "sleep" for space travel.

2. (My favorite) The vampire is there as an extreme example of a leader who regards all of his underlings as meat and ultimately expendable. Accomplishing the mission is the only goal."
I agree with this one, based as well on my reading of Starfish (first in Watts’ Rifters series). Watts’ worldview here and there is deeply dystopian and cynical: the only value of humans is their usefulness to corporations.
From my ten-year-old review of Starfish:
☠ Amoral corporations and their minions won't bat an eye at immoral actions when those seem to be the most cost-effective way of attaining a goal.Starfish is rated a little below Blindsight, but if you like fiction that verges on a bitter near-apocalyptic dystopia, you'll probably enjoy it.
☠ Psychologically and emotional damaged people will among the preferred tools of these corporations, either because the damage itself is valuable or because the it renders the subject easier to mold into a better tool.
☠ "Normal" folks will be "damaged", sometimes willingly, so they can be a corporate tool instead of an even more pathetic refugee.
☠ Anger, fear, hatred, and predatory and parasitic competitiveness — these are the only emotions that will be useful to such cutting-edge employees.


Why did Cunningham refer to everyone as "it"?
Why did Sarasti attack Siri? It's explained at some length but I didn't really get it.

Why did Cunningham refer to everyone as "it"?
Why did Sarasti attack Siri? It's explained at some length but I didn't really get it."
I believe Sarasti was driving home the point (in his own fashion) that consciousness, which includes the perception of pain, is a disadvantage for an individual or species.
It's been awhile since I read it, and I don't remember that about Cunningham, or really much at all about Cunningham, so I'm no help there.

If you want to discuss the book as you're reading, please clearly mark where you are in the book so that other brave souls can participate, and responders can limit spoilers to where you are presently.
A few questions to get conversation started:
1. What did you think of the world?
2. What did you think of the fantasy and scifi elements?
3. Did any of it horrify you? What and how?
4. What worked or didn't for you?
Non-spoiler thread here: First impressions