- Go ahead and share any thoughts about anything in the first 95 pages of Playground, or about author Richard Powers or any of his previous books (I especially like Bewilderment, Overstory, Echo Maker, Galatea 2.2, Generosity: An Enhancement), or on the general subjects of the environment and/or AI.
- Re: the dedication (& 23f.): did anyone ever give you a book (or anything else) at around age 10 that had a significant impact on your later life? Why do you think Clearly It Is Ocean so impacted Todd?
- Any thoughts on the Ta'aroa creation story, and the role of artist in bringing gods (and other creative products) into being? Do such stories convey a deeper-than-literal truth? What might that be, in this instance?
- Why do you think Ina sobbed through the last act of The Tempest? 4 Has any work of art (literature or otherwise) ever moved you to tears? Why?
- Is it possible to raise a family "away from the growing sadness of the real world"? 5
- COMMENT? Todd Keane, "the first person to reach the future" [as the novel will reveal] is now "retreating into the past"... 9 And what does he mean, that when he was young he could "breathe under water"? 13
- COMMENT? What do you make of the multiple references to "hallucinations"? (16, 19, passim)
- Rafi frequently dreams of "the first day of first grade"... 20 Do you have any recurrent dreams from childhood? Are they pleasant, disturbing, instructive, ...?
- Todd's former company's breakthrough, he says, will hasten humanity's "fourth and perhaps final act." 26 What do you think were the first three acts? What do you imagine might be the fourth?
- Had you ever heard of Makatea? Any thoughts about its history?
- COMMENT? "Makatea helped Homo sapiens subdue the Earth. But in the process, the island was consumed." 31
- "People and their emotions puzzled me." 33 Do you think this is true of many tech pioneers and computing entrepreneurs? Is it concerning that their creations have come to preoccupy so many people? 33 Were we READY> for the digital/Internet revolution? Are we READY> for the changes AI may bring to society, emotional health, et al?
Should We Go Extinct?: A Philosophical Dilemma for Our Unbearable Times by Todd May
A surprisingly lighthearted approach to a heavy subject, though not so surprising coming from the philosophical advisor to The Good Place. Most lives are indeed worth living, we may agree, while still also wondering whether the total species impact of humanity hasn't been a net loss for life on this planet.
But wouldn't our self-inflicted extinction be an awful abrogation of responsibility? Don't we owe it to the future of life to stick around and try to clean up the mess we've made?
Well, at least 'til after the WBC final?
"…the idea that humans are destroying life on the planet for many of our fellow creatures or that we could get into a war that would make life unlivable for many others—that's not so crazy. Instead, it's fact. And how about the thought that given what we're doing, perhaps we should seriously consider whether we should go extinct, whether the world would be better off without us? Maybe that's not so crazy either.
The not-craziness of it is why I've been thinking about this for some time now. In fact, several years ago I penned some very preliminary thoughts on it for the (now extinct) New York Times blog The Stone, raising the possibility that human extinction might be at once a tragedy and a good thing. It would be a tragedy for two reasons. First, in addition to the suffering that would precede it, it would involve the loss of much of what humans value and only humans can create: art, science, and so on. Second—here is the classically tragic part—that loss would be caused by humans. We, like King Lear or Oedipus, would be the cause of our demise. But our extinction would not be all bad news. The end of human existence would also be the end of the massive suffering humans cause, largely to non-human animals. (Granted, we also cause a good bit of suffering to one another—and not just through social media.
But, as I'll argue in the next chapter, for most of us our lives, in the end, are well worth living.) It's not that animals don't cause suffering to one another. Of course they do.
But no non-human animal can cause the extraordinary level of suffering that humans do, through factory farming and the consumption that goes along with it, deforestation, plastic disposal into the oceans, scientific experimentation, and the like…"
— Should We Go Extinct?: A Philosophical Dilemma for Our Unbearable Times by Todd May
https://a.co/0jeNMx01