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Re: The theory that makes me love it: | |
Posted By: scarab | Date: 6/10/12 4:57 a.m. |
In Response To: Re: The theory that makes me love it: (Hawki) : I think you raise some good points. As I mentioned, that the mala'kak's : motivations are never explained works to the film's advantage almost. : No-one has an answer, and it may not even be a question that is worth : asking in the first place (e.g. under evolutionary theory, there's no : "why" we're here, because why implies intent). Depends on how : you choose to view the world. It annoys me that film and TV science fiction has so little respect for or knowledge of the actual science. Its clear that they are writing fantasy and that they just use the cachet of science to give their fluff an air of plausibility. TV and film (perhaps most) science fiction is anti-science. DNA magic can do anything, any sufficiently advanced tech is indistinguishable from magic, I'm sure that you have heard that one. If Prometheus had magicians cast spells to do the things we saw then our reactions would be, "I don't believe that can happen". Use nano-tech DNA and suddenly people go along with you. Its so cynical. Anyway, Shaw was asking a question that has been answered. Where did we come from? We evolved on earth. We are primate, mammal, amniote, tetrapod, vertebrate, deuterostome, metazoan, eukaryotes, that share common ancestry with the bacteria and archea of earth. Does Scott know this? Perhaps not. Does he care? I very much doubt it. :-) I shouldn't let it get to me but, grrrr, it does. :-)
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