There was a lot going on in this episode but I kind of liked the pacing and the slice-of-life/Kaylon/political plot lines all going on at the same time. It felt like life on a ship.
Also - what did Mercer & Co think starting diplomacy with such a big lie? I'm no diplomat but even i know that this is the completely wrong way to go about it - starting a relationship with a deception is a huge No, better be upfront about the differences and then try to find common ground. Boggles my mind.
This is why i wrote to reset them by keeping the data about the family they serve intact. I don't see how the information that the father of the family likes his coffee black should prevent higher function resets.
Which means either those flashbacks all take place within a year, or that race aged at a slow rate.But the kids are still exactly the same age.
But only because it's the Call Of Duty!The “I’ll do it” made me LoL. I’m sure most men would say that in that situation.![]()
They were sentient, they could feel pain. The self-awareness was the "ghost in the machine" in that even if you destroyed their memories, the structures of their brains had changed. You'd have to destroy them to stop them from regaining that awareness.What i don't get concerning the Kaylon service bots - if the company knew they'd develop self awareness why not regularly ( maybe on a weekly basis) mind wipe/reset their higher logical functions? Shouldn't the problem be solved by reverting them to factory state and just keep basic information about the family they serve, such as what they like to eat, their habits and such?
Also - what did Mercer & Co think starting diplomacy with such a big lie? I'm no diplomat but even i know that this is the completely wrong way to go about it - starting a relationship with a deception is a huge No, better be upfront about the differences and then try to find common ground. Boggles my mind.
All considered there were 3 storylines running alongside each other, it's a but much. I'm not sure what deal they have with Hulu but shorten the episodes to the standard 42 minutes format, do an A and B storyline per episode and increase the amount of episodes slightly - could work out better but then i'm no entertainment professional and don't know the reality of show production.
Also good to see they'd not completely abandon the humor, it was quite funny in this episode. If they keep it at that level and have humor in appropriate scenes it would be great.
They knew the Kaylon could feel pain. That's why the kids were doing it, they found it funny for K1 to be made helpless in pain on the floor. These people saw the Kaylons as an inferior, servant race unworthy of empathy. If you don't want someone questioning you, you don't choose sentient beings, and treat them like a tool to be punished when their own physical or emotional needs are presented.The Kaylon could have just run away, but they decided to murder people instead. The people maybe didn't think of the robots as having the ability to feel pain, sort of like our computers are just tools. The adults just wanted their robot to obey and not be questioning all the time. (They have kids for that) The kids seemed really mean but maybe they were laughing because the robot "danced" when they used that device. Kids can be so clueless. I know what the writers were trying to portray, but I'm not sure I'm convinced. I tell Alexa to shut up and I don't feel bad about it.![]()
The Kaylon could have just run away, but they decided to murder people instead. The people maybe didn't think of the robots as having the ability to feel pain, sort of like our computers are just tools. The adults just wanted their robot to obey and not be questioning all the time. (They have kids for that) The kids seemed really mean but maybe they were laughing because the robot "danced" when they used that device. Kids can be so clueless. I know what the writers were trying to portray, but I'm not sure I'm convinced. I tell Alexa to shut up and I don't feel bad about it.![]()
They knew the Kaylon could feel pain. That's why the kids were doing it, they found it funny for K1 to be made helpless in pain on the floor. These people saw the Kaylons as an inferior, servant race unworthy of empathy. If you don't want someone questioning you, you don't choose sentient beings, and treat them like a tool to be punished when their own physical or emotional needs are presented.
Our computers are tools, nothing more, because they lack sentience, they are not alive in any sense. They do not feel pain, they do not have fears or concerns.
As for running away, in US history, when slaves would run away, slave patrols would be formed to hunt them down and return them to their masters. That's how our whole policing system was founded here.
So no, while I hate the idea of genocide, that the slaves rose up against their masters is not at all out of place in either our history or this story, and is a quite logical followup to what happens when the tables turn on the oppressors and the whip is taken from them.
I think it still works because if you were treated with nothing but hatred, disdain, and made to feel excruciating pain every time you so much as *thought* about disobeying an order, would you just leave, or would there be a part of you that says these people must pay for what they've done before they do it again to someone else?But couldn't they have left and gone to somewhere else in the universe? Leave their oppressors behind? I see the attempt to correlate this to human history but I think this misses.
I commented to my husband that much of the fear of white slave owners was *exactly* that - that the slaves would massacre them. As @FPAlpha wrote above, without emotions, it probably seemed a purely logical course of action. However, Isaac's character has given small hints (through his actions) that the Kaylon are *not* completely devoid of emotion, so it may not have been purely logic anyway. Also, I noticed that K1 made sure the parents saw him before shooting them, but shot the kids quickly in their sleep - some kind of mercy, perhaps?That said, yeah, killing the kids was too much, IMO, and the Kaylon believing that all biological beings would act the same way to excuse their genocide is too much.
Um... OK, thribs, sometimes, when a woman gets caught up in things, muscles can involuntarily... spasm.Maybe if they had actual sex rather than tv sex, he wouldn’t get hurt as much.
Seriously… what were they doing under the sheets?![]()
AAGH! That's a horrible thought!The awful thing is that they are probably still sharing that log/file, and still being soul whipped every time they read/experience the file/log, and will keep doing so until the end of time.
Maybe if they had actual sex rather than tv sex, he wouldn’t get hurt as much.
Seriously… what were they doing under the sheets?![]()
What i don't get concerning the Kaylon service bots - if the company knew they'd develop self awareness why not regularly ( maybe on a weekly basis) mind wipe/reset their higher logical functions? Shouldn't the problem be solved by reverting them to factory state and just keep basic information about the family they serve, such as what they like to eat, their habits and such?
Also - what did Mercer & Co think starting diplomacy with such a big lie? I'm no diplomat but even i know that this is the completely wrong way to go about it - starting a relationship with a deception is a huge No, better be upfront about the differences and then try to find common ground. Boggles my mind.
I commented to my husband that much of the fear of white slave owners was *exactly* that - that the slaves would massacre them. As @FPAlpha wrote above, without emotions, it probably seemed a purely logical course of action. However, Isaac's character has given small hints (through his actions) that the Kaylon are *not* completely devoid of emotion, so it may not have been purely logic anyway. Also, I noticed that K1 made sure the parents saw him before shooting them, but shot the kids quickly in their sleep - some kind of mercy, perhaps?
That suggests the creator species had interstellar travel, which I saw no indication of. And even if they did, what's to stop the creators from chasing after them? Even if the Kaylon took whatever the equivalent to a space shuttle and flew off at sublight speeds since as robots they don't age or need sustenance or even oxygen, well, do you really think the creators are going to stand by as the Kaylon try to make off with one of their spacecraft? Or that once the Kaylon did leave, the creators would just shrug and say "well, that sucks" and get back to business as usual?But couldn't they have left and gone to somewhere else in the universe? Leave their oppressors behind?
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