The Sword and Laser discussion

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Hyperion
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Hyp: Chapter Five: Keats is as Keats Does
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That said, I think the author answers your questions in a way different than one may have thought. To my mind, there exists a vast gulf between my conception, and maybe it's just a vague popular conception, of John Keats as a man and John Keats as a cybrid.
I think of Keats as pacifist romantic poet suffering from depression and years of illness, whereas the John Keats that we get from Simmons is more John Keats by way of Lieutenant Commander Data or a Nexus 6.
What do we get of Keats in Simmons' writing? An odd accent, a hair color, a bit of romance, and some Keats references. Through most of the action of the chapter the cybrid is clearly a totally plugged-in kind of superhuman/android that works technological miracles, murders fools, and goes out all RoboCop/Rambo decked out in body armor and mini-guns.
It's got exactly zero to do with Keats as a man and everything to do with the problems, capabilities, and desires of an artificial man who wants to become a real boy. He's got Keats' memories but doesn't act like Keats in any conceivable fashion.
The character isn't Keats and his goal of divesting himself of his extraordinary capabilities as a cybrid won't make him any more Keats than he was before.


I like your question, Karly: "If Johnny Keats isn't human, is that actually a bad thing?" Most of us are aware of the person we're supposed to be, whether it's a persona we hope to be someday or one someone else wants us to be. Johnny's in the unique position of knowing exactly what he was built to become, and he knows he can't live up to it - I don't know that he ever really comes to grips with it because we don't see a lot of his normal life outside the case, but becoming disconnected from the cloud was a start.

Perhaps I'm misreading you (or Simmons), but if the point is that there is some connection to "the Past," represented here by John Keats, then isn't that utterly defeated if, in fact, Johnny-5 is *not* anything like the poet Keats? Particularly in the (tragically smarmy) bit in which Johnny stands at the window, declaiming (bad) poetry, I thought Simmons was trying to suggest that this effectively was Keats, the poet, given a new lease on life through technology. I just think Simmons did a bad job of it. The entire tale of the Detective was, I thought, very jarring, really violating the tone established by the other stories.

Interesting! Like Karly, I thought the opposite. The cybrid John Keats was an experiment that failed. That even the super-intelligent AIs capable of re-creating portions of Old Earth and genetically engineering the cybrids still couldn't bring back the dead.


This is explained in more detail in book 2 and then after book 4 if you ask the same question you could come up with a different more precise answer again.
Its hard to remember which revelations come in which books but I think at this stage I was thinking that The Cybrid was making moves to gain independance from the Core and they didn't like it. But there was a lot lot more to it as I was to read and find out.
The concepts of re-creating people from memory, or continuance of consciousness, have been bandied about in sci-fi for awhile, and they and their ilk are among the reasons I read sci-fi: they're ways to think about and explore what it is to be human.
Simmons continues playing with the theme of consciousness, and what constitutes a legitimate "person" (e.g. with the ego-less Bikura and the regressing Rachel), but here it's a character who's entirely aware he's less than complete.
Does his awareness of his own falsehood make him more or less human? Does memory make a man/woman? Did anyone else picture Jude Law in A.I. despite Johnny being described with curly red hair?