What an awful story. I just read it, and am now in a state of outrage.
The message is ostensibly that the laws of nature don’t care about human welfare, which, as we all know, is true enough. But the problem described in the story is entirely human-caused: a straightforward engineering failure. It’s the result of stupidity, poor planning, and failing to learn from past mistakes.
And the sexism (“OMG It’s a girl!”) makes it all the more distasteful, although that’s probably unfair of me, since it was after all written in the 1950s.
I can’t see Eliezer writing a story like this. Ever.
What an awful story. I just read it, and am now in a state of outrage.
The message is ostensibly that the laws of nature don’t care about human welfare, which, as we all know, is true enough. But the problem described in the story is entirely human-caused: a straightforward engineering failure. It’s the result of stupidity, poor planning, and failing to learn from past mistakes.
And the sexism (“OMG It’s a girl!”) makes it all the more distasteful, although that’s probably unfair of me, since it was after all written in the 1950s.
I can’t see Eliezer writing a story like this. Ever.