nemorathwald (
nemorathwald) wrote2004-10-08 01:57 pm
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Ask me three questions.
A meme lifted from
dawnwolf
Ask me 3 questions, no more no less. Ask me anything you want, and I will answer truthfully and fully. Then I want you to go to your journal, and copy and paste this, allowing your friends (including me) to ask you anything.
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Ask me 3 questions, no more no less. Ask me anything you want, and I will answer truthfully and fully. Then I want you to go to your journal, and copy and paste this, allowing your friends (including me) to ask you anything.
3 questions
2. Do you like margarine?
3. What the hell?!?
-=ShoEboX=-
Re: 3 questions
2. Margarine is a heartbreaking work of staggering genius.
3. You can say that again.
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2. If you could change one thing about yourself what would it be?
3. What was the last movie you watched?
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2. Wow, it's so difficult for a transhumanist to answer that question. Naturally-occurring species are all such incredibly sub-optimal "designs" from a biotech point of view. The short story 0wnz0red by Cory Doctorow recently inspired me with the perfect answer if I had to choose one thing: an interface between my autonomic processes and a microcontroller, so I can hack into my biology through a computer and change anything I want. We're able to wiggle our toes at will, but we're locked out of all the important stuff like immunoresponse and metabolism and cognition.
A sanitized metabolism that's hardened to viruses.
Make it no longer true that a human being has to excercise 20 minutes before starting to burn any fat at all.
Triple-jointed.
No longer need to sleep.
But the best things of all would be what could be done to my mind and personhood. Hacking into human nature itself:
"The human emotions as they stand lack an important kind of self-consistency. The human emotional architecture has a fundamental imbalance in it. We are out of kilter. Usually this particular kind of inconsistency would correct itself very rapidly, but in humans it can't, because unlike an Artificial Intelligence, we don't have access to our own source code.
The inconsistency I'm talking about is that we don't want to want what we want. We like eating chocolate, and we don't like eating lettuce. But we wish that we enjoyed lettuce as much as we enjoyed chocolate, because then we'd be thinner. We stay on the treadmill, and we hate that, but we wish we didn't hate it, because then we wouldn't have to expend mental energy. If we had access to our own source code, we could fix the problem. But unfortunately humans were not designed by humans. Humans were designed by evolution. So we eat the cheeseburger, and give up on the exercise plan, and don't read all the books we want to read, and we're never quite as nice as we think we ought to be. It's an unstable condition that can only persist as long as we don't have a choice in the matter. We are not who we would choose to be, if we were free."
The way I see it, your genetic code is not your friend. It created you; but only as its uncaring tool to gain at your expense. Genes express themselves in subtle influences on our desires. We don't always follow our feelings and urges because we're reasoning creatures, but those feelings and urges come from genes. What you need to realize is that your genetic code is completely selfish and would happily ruin your life in order to propagate. Men and women shouldn't be ashamed of how they're influenced by the genetic code trying to hijack their lives. For instance, a man's wanderlust and a woman's damn nesting instinct. It's just inconvenient that what's good for the genetic code is sometimes different from what's good for us, so our choices usually are an uphill fight against feelings, and this frustrates me. That which generates interest and infatuation, or which triggers biological clocks, contradicts what our rational minds would tell us, if we allow our minds to question our animal instinct. If you refuse to question the truth claims of your basic drives, you are royally screwed, because they will contradict each other. Nature has not been good to the human race in this respect. Thanks for creating us, Mother Nature, now would you please stop trying to run our adult lives for your own blind gain? So to answer your question in one sentence: I would take control from Mother Nature.
3. Club Dread, by Broken Lizard, on DVD. This movie sucked.
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But where are your three questions in MY journal?
=)
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2. What was your major?
3. What is your favorite Bible verse/passage?
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2. Commercial Art with a minor in Graphic Design.
3. When I was a Christian I didn't have a favorite verse. If I had to choose the part that amuses me the most these days, it would be a toss-up between 1st Kings 14:10a, "cut off from Jeroboam him that pisseth against the wall;" 1 Samuel 21 where the people of Ashdod get hemorrhoids "in their secret parts," that's a hoot; and Isaiah 32: "Tremble, ye women ... strip you, and make you bare ... They shall lament for the teats." Bonus points for that one.
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2) What kind of pie do you like?
3) If you could redo your college years entirely, where would you go, and what would your major be?
-Karen
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2. Chicken pot pie.
3. Probably University of Michigan in Ann Arbor so that I could have started attending ConFusion several years earlier. My major would be in animation and I would have tried to get one of their internships with LucasArts or Pixar.
speak for yourself! <grin>
On to questions...
1. What one thing or person do you love most, right now?
2. What is the one thing you like most about yourself?
3. If you met someone who had never, ever read a single SF/Fantasy book in their lives, had not even heard of the genre but was open to trying it out, what is the first book you would introduce to that person.
Re: speak for yourself! <grin>
Rather this is a question about me; about how a few chance attractors in my neurophysiology happen to react. When my "heart" really grabs my attention, I've learned to take that with a grain of salt because it's self-destructively contradictory and if I acted on it, it would act against itself. The more I realize this, the more it tends to get off its megaphone and let the rest of the psyche do their jobs in peace. Most of the time I react emotionally only when I judge circumstances realistically deserving anger, fear, happiness etc. Consequently my "heart" is sucky when it comes to taking charge. Recently people have been asking me about decisions, "what does your heart say?"... My "heart" doesn't just toss a coin and declare a winner. It performs as my cognition instructs it to perform from moment to moment, and I try to record all that data and estimate how many points it has awarded to each person or thing so far. Asking me for a digitally-clear intepretation of all that data is not reasonable.
Sorry, I don't like this question and there exists no answer. My bad. Under the rules of the game you get your question back and can try again.
2. Another question of perfect superlatives. I don't feel nearly so guilty about leaving out parts of myself deserving of honorable mention, such as my skills at two-player Tetris, telling a friend the story of a novel I just read, sculpture, sex, or making coffee. So I will answer off-the-cuff and say what I like MOST about me is my honesty/realism. My craving for meaningful information about that which, when I stop believing in it, doesn't go away.
3. Before she or he embarks on science fiction, there is a non-fiction book this person needs to read: Unbounding the Future by Eric K. Drexler. It is available in print and for free on the web. This is the work that persuaded me that within our lifetimes we will see technological revolutions which will overturn all the assumptions of the present world. I love the world-view-changing, paradigm-shifting, "real-life-type-of-scary" experience called future shock. That's what I read science fiction for. Orientation to values, a sense of where we come from and where we are going, what is the self, "our place" in the universe if there is any such thing. These are the things that religion used to serve which are so admirably served by the futurists who write plausible science fiction set in this century. These topics would not be served by the suspension of disbelief required by fantasy. When I read a work which satisfies me, it persuasively compels my belief and involves an act of the will to suspend belief, not to suspend disbelief. I have to make an effort to use my critical thinking skills to see the problems with it or detect if the author is, in my opinion, wrong. This is a second stage to the reading process which I also enjoy. Those who are not interested in that are not going to enjoy any science fiction that I would recommend, such as Greg Egan, and should instead read some easy brain-candy with an arbitrarily-imagined distant future that a movie producer pulled out of his butt. They would probably enjoy character development or some such thing. I can offer them no advice on that.
If you want anything further on any of these answers, feel free to ask.
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2 & 3 Pending.
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2) ma do se melbri
3) la lojban. mo be do
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2 should read as follows:
do ma se melbri
although you're free to answer the original as well if you really want to.
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3) I know that "mo" means a type of pronoun that serves as a question mark by standing in place of an entire predicate-argument relationship. But I have not yet gotten around to learning the grammar of how that works, so I don't understand your question.
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As for 2, I relize that I really did mean to say "melbi" and not "melbri". Chalk that up to hasty reading.
So, care to take another shot at 2?
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3. ni'o i mi jbopli
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1. It's the end of the world and you only have one person to live the rest of the days with. Who would that be and why?
(that's technically two but I'm counting it as one same applies for all the others)
2. Burn or drown and why?
3. What is the most frightening thing you have ever done?
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I would choose Rachel. She's been better when I'm depressed than anyone else so far, and I would never want her to be alone at that time. When she and I got divorced I had a great deal of plans for the future, but if I have no future then I may as well call the plans off. Kind of like the wedding at the end of Joe Vs. The Volcano just before he jumps in. (Have you seen that movie?) "What's the problem? You afraid of the commitment? You'll have to love me and honor me for about thirty seconds. You can't handle that?" ;^)
Parenthetically, let me add this. Questions involving the words "only one" and "love the most" are very popular in these questions. It seems pretty cruel and exclusionist to me. Life doesn't actually demand such choices, only people do (the people who are, in your words, "corny and off-the-wall"). There are so many worthy people in this world, that no one would ever, ever, ever be alone, if only we would all take turns and not demand permanence. Such a simple concept, "taking turns"... we learn it in kindergarten. Instead we make a game of musical chairs where the people who are still standing when the music stops are just stuck with what's left. Where is it written that I have to lock myself and my loved one away in a neat little white picket cage? Oh I forgot, it's written in our genes for raising children.
[rant] HATES'S HUMAN NATURE. WE HATES IT, PRECIOUS. *gollum*[/rant] ;^)
2. Drown. It seems less painful.
3. Something I've done that frightened someone else? Or me? My life has mostly been risk-averse. I've never been in a haunted house and I've only ridden three very tiny roller coasters. A thrill seeker, I am not. But I attended PCC and graduated. That's pretty frightening to sane people.
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3. What is the scariest thing you have ever done in your life that you were truly frightened of and done. That you bit your tongue or squeezed your hand (etc.) and FORCED yourself to do through your fear.
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Thanks....I think
Ali Babba and his 3 questions...
1) What is your favorite paradox scenario?
2) Who is the hottest female actress in Hollywood in your mind? What reasons do you have to make this decision? If you could affect/manipulate one part of her body, what would it be/what would you do to it?
3) What is the average airspeed velocity of a European swallow laden with a coconut?
Alright, I just had to ask number three! Just kidding...
The real number 3) Going back to the question asked by twoofdtm...
It's the end of the world and you only have one person (other than Rachel) to live the rest of your days with. Who would that be and why?
Re: Ali Babba and his 3 questions...
2. Scarlett Johanssen. I've had a crush on her ever since I saw Lost in Translation. She is not just "looking" at the guy in that film. Her expression makes it clear that she is "regarding" him. That is the word to apply. I like the sort of critiquing attitude she conveys with her expression and voice, like things trouble her and matter to her such as the meaning of her life; why some relationships fail and others work; loneliness and isolation; but you don't see her character whining and crying about it, and she captures that attitude. Or maybe this perception is all just in my head. Watch the movie. Just look at her next to that shallow ditz in one scene and the difference is obvious. She finds a balance between cute and sophisticated, which is rare. I don't think any part of her needs to change, except her hair was perfect in L.I.T. and she's changed it since then.
3. Sneaky bastard! ;^D Oh! Just when I dodge the bullet you shoot it at me again! The problem is, if I choose Jessica or another woman she'll spend her final days before Apocalypse complaining she can't be with Frank or fill-in-the-blank with whoever X woman is in love with. This question game is so cool. You see, I told you it would be more fun to ask the annoying questions and not hold back. And it is! OK, what if I list my favorite people in no particular order? Is that what inquiring minds really want to know?
Bill.
Rachel.
Jessica.
You.
My brother Jon.
My brother Andy.
My grandfather.
Any of the several and numerous women who I have a totally pointless crush on.
Re: Ali Babba and his 3 questions...
I would NOT. Complain that is.
Now through talking to you I remember you saying if everybody else was left and we all got to choose the person we wanted to be with I do agree that I would be upset if you took me away from Frank because he would be who I would want to spend my final days with. I would not complain though. so NAH!! I would be upset but pleased you chose me.
So treat it as the last man on earth kinda thing you were talking about. Who would you choose then?
Re: Ali Babba and his 3 questions...