I can’t help but notice that Bella’s feelings of social awkwardness about trying to proselytize her fellow vampires not to eat people are exactly identical to how I feel about the tradeoff between social awkwardness and human life when it comes to persuading people to sign up for cryonics. Did you think that too while you were writing it?
Being a transhumanist puts you into sympathy with the strangest people, doesn’t it?
That particular analogy hadn’t occurred to me—I usually think of turning into a vampire as the cryonics insertion and the whole “don’t eat people” part as a more straightforward disagreement on ethics, rather than prudence. Still, if I got the feelings realistic enough that they map onto something in the same neighborhood that you experience, yay!
I can’t help but notice that Bella’s feelings of social awkwardness about trying to proselytize her fellow vampires not to eat people are exactly identical to how I feel about the tradeoff between social awkwardness and human life when it comes to persuading people to sign up for cryonics. Did you think that too while you were writing it?
Being a transhumanist puts you into sympathy with the strangest people, doesn’t it?
That particular analogy hadn’t occurred to me—I usually think of turning into a vampire as the cryonics insertion and the whole “don’t eat people” part as a more straightforward disagreement on ethics, rather than prudence. Still, if I got the feelings realistic enough that they map onto something in the same neighborhood that you experience, yay!
Do you notice how people that actually believe their religion have pretty much the same effect going?