Mandy wrote:Shit.. people whacking each other over the head with calculators is more believable than what P&tB created.

Moderators: Freakzilla, ᴶᵛᵀᴬ, Omphalos
Actually, if you watch that part in the film again, it says nothing about machines taking over but rather how humans became weak and lazy by their constant use, and how other humans used them as tools to enslave.dm1215 wrote:I always pictured it as man and machine beating the crap out of each other. Didn't the un-edited Lynch film show something along those lines in black and white sketches at the beginning.
If you do want to go with the man controlling machine aproach - I think it would have been more "FH" for any coercion to have been psychological rather than brute force or threat of force. More likely that men convinced the machines that their cause was the right one, brainwashing etc. IMO.Explosive charges on its power source, infection with parasite or viral agents that need to be disarmed daily, etc., for example?
To be honest I also read it in that sense, I'm just playing the DA on this one pointing out that it could be taken other ways. Men with allies, men with machines, you get the idea. I don't think that quote rules out any of your ideas, or even causes any major difficulties with them. As I said though, if you prefer the coercion route, I think psycological influence would make a better book.SandChigger wrote:Interesting. I've always read "with" there with...ahem, in an instrumental sense.
Yes.Spicelon wrote:Interesting. When I first encountered that quote, many years ago, I never
considered that "men with machines" might refer to a robot or some other
self-propelled AI object. I always looked at "machines" in this context as
something like an asset. Again, these were just first impressions. Did FH
ever conclusively state that in the BJ era that were actually robots?
"computers, thinking machines, and conscious robots"
well, if i had my digi-texts with me, i could do a little more recon. i think i'mSandChigger wrote:(Spicelon?! Reading is, like, ... da poop!)
Just wait until we take the pilots out. UAVs will fight the next major war.orald wrote:Or it could be as simple as the religeous masses(most probably of low economic and educational status) envied and feared the wealthy technocrats.
Some could(and do?) call the USA's fighter-bombers, guided missiles and advanced tanks "machines designed to opress people". Make it a bit more futuristic and you might get the BJ.
But humans still pilot the machines.Freakzilla wrote:Just wait until we take the pilots out. UAVs will fight the next major war.orald wrote:Or it could be as simple as the religeous masses(most probably of low economic and educational status) envied and feared the wealthy technocrats.
Some could(and do?) call the USA's fighter-bombers, guided missiles and advanced tanks "machines designed to opress people". Make it a bit more futuristic and you might get the BJ.
But humans are fleshy and weak, and people cry and get angry when they die. Humans can malfunction, and not shoot when told.orald wrote:But how many "major wars" are we really going to have?
And you should know there's still no real substitute today(or for a few more tomorrows) to the soldier in the field.
Humans are too versatile.