Or, as various sci fi stories have laid out, will they immediately try to kill us, because they are insect based race and we are dealing with drones that only follow basic instinct, and we’s need to commune with the queen or some such to get them to understand that each of our species has a consciousness and free will, and we don’t exist in a hive mind
Comment on legs to die for
WarmSoda@lemm.ee 10 months ago
Makes me wonder if we ever do meet intelligent aliens will we instantly try to kill them not because we’re a tribe based war loving species, but if it’s simply because we’re so absolutely and deeply repulsed by something so different than us on an instinctual level.
kautau@lemmy.world 10 months ago
frezik@midwest.social 10 months ago
It’s fine, we’ll train a ten year old prodigy to kill their entire race.
kautau@lemmy.world 10 months ago
ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de 10 months ago
I just want to state on the record that the book is a short read and extremely better than the movie and that anyone here who hasn’t read Enders Game, should do so.
DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe 10 months ago
I thought the movie did a pretty good job tbh. It’s just that Ender’s internal monologue is so important to the novel that it’s hard to translate that into a film.
Of course, I also blame Ender’s Game for every shitty YA series having a War Academy arc, so I just don’t care about its legacy that much.
Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de 10 months ago
the one huge and quite funny flaw with that idea is that queens have absolutely jackshit power over a colony, if anything the queen of a colony is basically a slave that gets constantly pampered and directed by the workers with no free will whatsoever.
If we met an alien hive-mind species it’d probably be much like interacting with a military, just much more tightly integrated and profoundly devoid of corruption, imagine HAL 9000 but made up of a million people working together to run the computations.
So they’d likely work tirelessly to figure out what precisely we are, if they determine we’re a threat they’d attack without mercy, and if they determine they can benefit from cooperation with us they’d be the best ally we could ever imagine albeit extremely manipulative.
Naz@sh.itjust.works 10 months ago
Interesting deduction. After analyzing all of the data, we have decided to expend zero effort and go around.
Not our problem, sorry, fly-past planet.
MrBusiness@lemmy.zip 10 months ago
Have you met the Borg?
exocrinous@startrek.website 10 months ago
Speak for yourself, I exist in a hive mind.
TheBat@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Bold of you to assume there won’t be humans trying to fuck them.
Notyou@sopuli.xyz 10 months ago
Porque no los dos?
WarmSoda@lemm.ee 10 months ago
Didn’t feel the need to state the obvious lol
jeena@jemmy.jeena.net 10 months ago
That’s the plot of Starship Troopers.
Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de 10 months ago
nah, people work with deep sea creatures all day and just find them cool.
it’d just make international relations with them extremely difficult, honestly district 9 is probably the most realistic take on how we’d treat aliens. We’d be sufficiently unable to empathize with them that we’d treat them like shit, but there’s no real reason to actively try to wipe them out.
DragonTypeWyvern@literature.cafe 10 months ago
The District 9 aliens are a direct and extremely obvious metaphor for apartheid. The lack of empathy had nothing to do with capability, just a cultural hatred of the other, and it will, and did, like all apartheids, end with genocide.
ThrowawayPermanente@sh.itjust.works 10 months ago
Embrace the framling, study the ramen, kill the varelse.
Mr_Blott@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Have you ever met a Belgian? Same thing
ummthatguy@lemmy.world 10 months ago
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Davel23@fedia.io 10 months ago
There's two things I can't stand. Intolerance, and Belgians.
Tomato666@lemmy.sdf.org 10 months ago
But have you had Belgian beer ortheir fast food. No wonder everyone goes there for a fight.