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Oh okay glad it sounds like that to you. The first book also has two navigators disguising themselves as guards by wearing contact lenses. You know, these guys:
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 17:26 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:29 |
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I don't know, there's a bunch of references to screens and stuff throughout the first books. I always took it to mean that computers with a 20th-century level of sophistication were permitted because they only allow for fairly mundane tasks, but AIs ("machines in the likeness of a human mind") are explicitly outlawed. I'd be curious if the Encyclopedia provides more detail.
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 17:34 |
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Jewmanji posted:"Taraza leaned forward in her chairdog and scanned the Records Relay projecting its condensed Bene Gesserit glyphs above the tabletop for her eyes only. "Darwi Odrade," the display identified the standing woman, and then came the essential biography, which Taraza already knew in detail. The display served several purposes- it provided a secure reminder for the Mother Superior, it allowed an occasional delay for thought while she appeared to scan the records, and it was a final argument should something negative arise from this interview". As I understand it, in the past, human starships used AI supercomputers to navigate foldspace, but then the war with the machines happened and AI was banned by religious decree, so human switched to navigators and became dependent on the spice for interstellar travel. It's a premise that I'm skeptical of. No real-world religion bans technology. I imagine a religion that tried to ban something as useful as supercomputers would get cast aside quickly once humans got over the emotional trauma. Religions are usually shaped by the practical requirements of the cultures that spawn them. Kurzon fucked around with this message at 17:59 on Sep 19, 2021 |
# ? Sep 19, 2021 17:46 |
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I guess I always imagined that the type of probabilistic computations that mentats and navigators are doing is so far beyond what a computer in 2021 can conceive of that things like pocket calculators aren’t really in the same domain. Like, to me it’d be like outlawing handguns under the rationale that they are outlawed by a nuclear weapons treaty. A machine that bears the likeness of a human mind, to me, isn’t a computer doing gross arithmetic, but maybe I’ve misinterpreted the text. Kurzon posted:It's a premise that I'm skeptical of. No real-world religion bans technology. I imagine a religion that tried to ban something as useful as supercomputers would get cast aside quickly once humans got over the emotional trauma. Religions are usually shaped by the practical requirements of the cultures that spawn them. I never really assumed that the Jihad was strictly religious in nature (despite the word "Jihad"). I took it much more to be a labor uprising, like the Luddites. It probably took on quasi-religious proscriptions, but it seemed to me that it could be thought of much more like an arms treaty. Jewmanji fucked around with this message at 18:02 on Sep 19, 2021 |
# ? Sep 19, 2021 17:58 |
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Jewmanji posted:I never really assumed that the Jihad was strictly religious in nature (despite the word "Jihad"). I took it much more to be a labor uprising, like the Luddites. It probably took on quasi-religious proscriptions, but it seemed to me that it could be thought of much more like an arms treaty. The thing is, this had enormous consequences for human civilization. Many people chafe under the yoke of the Spacing Guild, which has a monopoly on navigators and therefore space travel. Surely some worlds might try to re-invent machine navigators so as to break this monopoly?
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 18:10 |
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Kurzon posted:And likewise I bet the ban on AI wasn't effected overnight, but a gradual process of phasing out machine navigators. Well IIRC Leto II was regularly getting intelligence reports stating that IX was trying to do just that.
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 18:14 |
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Jewmanji posted:"Taraza leaned forward in her chairdog and scanned the Records Relay projecting its condensed Bene Gesserit glyphs above the tabletop for her eyes only. "Darwi Odrade," the display identified the standing woman, and then came the essential biography, which Taraza already knew in detail. The display served several purposes- it provided a secure reminder for the Mother Superior, it allowed an occasional delay for thought while she appeared to scan the records, and it was a final argument should something negative arise from this interview". Sounds like a microfiche to me.
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 20:26 |
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Wizchine posted:Sounds like a microfiche to me. A microfiche reader that identifies the person in front of it and then supplies the relevant information about them? No, that's a computer, don't be like this, this is a sensible thread
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 20:28 |
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I just find it laughable the assumption that this world has city-sized starships capable of doing interstellar travel all without a single computer onboard. I don’t think that’s what Herbert intended. The world seems much more plausible to me if you have crude computers akin to what we had in the 20th century than no computers at all. Again, this doesn’t obviate the need for mentats and navigators etc
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 20:46 |
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They are able to do some ridiculous thing with non-computer tech, so I don't think it's too ridiculous to assume that this is meant to be something like that. For instance, the training dummy thing Alia fights in Messiah fights so well you could kill yourself with it by going too high on the light scale, but is apparently just run with "servomotors". If it was actually a fighting AI in there it would be INCREDIBLY haram so it just isn't.
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 20:48 |
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Jewmanji posted:I just find it laughable the assumption that this world has city-sized starships capable of doing interstellar travel all without a single computer onboard. I don’t think that’s what Herbert intended. The world seems much more plausible to me if you have crude computers akin to what we had in the 20th century than no computers at all. Again, this doesn’t obviate the need for mentats and navigators etc I can't see that the plausibility of it was ever a concern.
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 21:28 |
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Kurzon posted:Well for what it's worth, here's the analysis. This guy sounds like he knows what he's talking about. You could argue the Atreides are arrogant, but Piter, who comes up with the plan, also seems to think it's a big deal: "It's assumed that ultimate conditioning cannot be removed without killing the subject. However, as someone once observed, given the right lever you can move a planet. We found the lever that moved the doctor." So does Feyd: "he found this a fascinating subject. Everyone knew you couldn't subvert Imperial Conditioning!" and the Baron seems to think it's at least somewhat impressive: "that was how we bent the Imperial Conditioning. You couldn't endure seeing your Bene Gesserit witch grovel in Piter's pain amplifiers." So at a certain point you'd just be arguing that everyone in the novel is a moron. Or everyone is lying to each other and therefore the reader... but you can make the text say anything if you dismiss it that way. Its really just an execution problem, Herbert could have come up with a more specific set of circumstances, like some kind of logical trap, but he didn't. Pedro De Heredia fucked around with this message at 21:44 on Sep 19, 2021 |
# ? Sep 19, 2021 21:38 |
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"I can't believe they don't just <blank>" is explicitly the point of the entire loving setting. That's why they are stagnating. One of the signs that the Golden Path is starting to work is when all the various factions start doing all that poo poo. Building artificial navigators and using more advanced technology and all that other stuff. It's not a bug, it's a feature. You are supposed to think it's all kind of silly and broken [Also profoundly alien, even for the mid 60s] that they've replaced modern technology of 'our' [Again, mid 60s] time with super-humans. They'd rather build a giant fishman in a tank than use a loving computer. They are out there.
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 21:59 |
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Jewmanji posted:I just find it laughable the assumption that this world has city-sized starships capable of doing interstellar travel all without a single computer onboard. I don’t think that’s what Herbert intended. The world seems much more plausible to me if you have crude computers akin to what we had in the 20th century than no computers at all. Again, this doesn’t obviate the need for mentats and navigators etc If you go further back, you have stories with starships with "computers", that is, big rooms staffed with people doing calculations. Just a bunch of normal engineers, sitting there, pen in hand, writing out calculations. Is that better or worse than having no real machine computer?
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 22:20 |
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So we are just dismissing the failson novels where the Butlerian Jihad involved wars against Terminators?
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 23:04 |
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AlternateAccount posted:So we are just dismissing the failson novels where the Butlerian Jihad involved wars against Terminators? I mean it's the safe thing to do, yeah.
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 23:11 |
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Mulva posted:"I can't believe they don't just <blank>" is explicitly the point of the entire loving setting. That's why they are stagnating. One of the signs that the Golden Path is starting to work is when all the various factions start doing all that poo poo. Building artificial navigators and using more advanced technology and all that other stuff. It's not a bug, it's a feature. You are supposed to think it's all kind of silly and broken [Also profoundly alien, even for the mid 60s] that they've replaced modern technology of 'our' [Again, mid 60s] time with super-humans. They'd rather build a giant fishman in a tank than use a loving computer. They are out there. Again, I think stagnation is a perfectly understandable concept that doesn't preclude them from having computers. Like, aren't there even satellites that the Fremen are hiding from (or they're paying off the Guild not to reveal that they've discovered the nascent terraforming initiative at the poles)? They're not in the stone age.
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# ? Sep 19, 2021 23:36 |
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Jewmanji posted:Well IIRC Leto II was regularly getting intelligence reports stating that IX was trying to do just that. Yeah this was a pretty major plot point. He was monitoring their progress and only keeping up the appearance of suppressing them. Ixian navigator machines seem like something Leto would want to happen.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 00:22 |
There's also the heavy implication that them working on a navigator is preventing or diverting resources from the work that would lead to the out-of-control humanity-ending killing machines Siona sees in her vision.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 01:08 |
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Kurzon posted:From Heretics of Dune, which came out in 1984. I guess by then Frank Herbert realized that the future wouldn't make sense if all machine computers were banned. many religions have banned and restricted technologies, both throughout history and in the present day
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 01:38 |
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Kurzon posted:From Heretics of Dune, which came out in 1984. I guess by then Frank Herbert realized that the future wouldn't make sense if all machine computers were banned. My dude have you ever heard of the Amish?
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 02:00 |
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AnEdgelord posted:My dude have you ever heard of the Amish? Or creationism?
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 02:11 |
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Baron von Eevl posted:Oh okay glad it sounds like that to you. I'm hazy about the details - wasn't there a whole levelling hierarchy to navigators, with the spice gas entombed ones at the top? Or was that a Lynchism?
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 02:32 |
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I only read the first four books, but the first book describes them as totally normal people and the second book describes them as weird fishmen in a spicetank, but that giant floating dude is 100% Lynch.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 02:36 |
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Jewmanji posted:I just find it laughable the assumption that this world has city-sized starships capable of doing interstellar travel all without a single computer onboard. I don’t think that’s what Herbert intended. The world seems much more plausible to me if you have crude computers akin to what we had in the 20th century than no computers at all. Again, this doesn’t obviate the need for mentats and navigators etc But there are computers, no? They’re explicit against some kinds of AI (those equivalent to human thought - “true AI”) so all the stuff we do today (and more) would still be fair game.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 03:35 |
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Right, yes, if you read my posts that's exactly what I'm asserting.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 03:43 |
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This is from the glossary of the first bookquote:Jihad, Butlerian: (see also Great Revolt)-the crusade against computers, thinking machines, and conscious robots begun in 201 B.G. and concluded in 108 B.G. Its chief commandment remains in the O.C. Bible as "Though shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind" There are no computers in the first three books, they only start appearing in God Emperor after Leto begins implementing the Golden path, this is literally from the books
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 04:24 |
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Herbert explicitly said Windows 95 was just at the edge of legality in Dune, but Windows 98 was banned.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 04:26 |
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Part of Herbert's big statement about grand movements is that they become runaway freight-trains and it doesn't necessarily matter what the original intent was. Like, whatever initial reasons justified the backlash against AI, once it becomes The Jihad of course it's gonna result in angry mobs smashing calculators with baseball bats.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 04:27 |
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porfiria posted:Herbert explicitly said Windows 95 was just at the edge of legality in Dune, but Windows 98 was banned. Thou shalt not make a computer in the likeness of a human mind, nor one that can support a serial bus that can be used for keyboards, mice, and printers all universally.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 04:32 |
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AnEdgelord posted:My dude have you ever heard of the Amish?
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 05:35 |
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In the world of Dune the Amish might run a whole planet or something, proportionally.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 05:48 |
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Martman posted:In the world of Dune the Amish might run a whole planet or something, proportionally.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 05:51 |
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really cool the US is getting this a full month after Europe I guess the trade off is that we get to watch it for free at home
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 06:32 |
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That Jamis guy was such an idiot. I bet he felt like a total dipshit when he died.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 07:46 |
Part of the allure of Dune is that this universe-spanning society 8000 years from now is utterly alien in how it functions, stop trying to inject weird 21st century concepts like "b-but you can't live without computer!" into it. The setting has explanations for it that are weird and make no sense (Mentats, spice-addled Navigators) to us, the modern human viewer, for a reason. Because it makes the setting weird and cool and foreign to our current understanding. "But you can't possibly run a starship without a computer" -- no dude, that's what the sick-rear end weird genetic mutants with the nictating eyelids and the sappho-stained lips and the big chonky dudes in the floating tanks/space suits filled with spice gas are for.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 07:50 |
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I kind of interpret the "machine mentality" that the jihad was against as not only AI, but industrialization, mass production, and capitalism. But it wasn't a communist uprising, so the result was a techno-feudalism where exploitation using many of those tools occurs piecemeal but the model is generally a colonial, or at best feudal relationship with semi-slave producers and in some cases guilds (as we see on Dune with spice harvesting) and a mercantilist economy. “Arrakis is a one-crop planet. One crop. It supports a ruling class that lives as ruling classes have lived in all times while, beneath them, a semihuman mass of semislaves exists on the leavings…” e: 8000 years? Dune is set a bit more than 10,000 years after the Jihad. In the original Dune Encylcopedia (not "cannon" but better than the timelines based on Herbert's kid's crap) the founding of the Spacing Guild shortly after the Jihad is 0 on the calendar and we're writing this at 14500 or so Before Guild. Hodgepodge fucked around with this message at 08:02 on Sep 20, 2021 |
# ? Sep 20, 2021 07:57 |
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Gargamel Gibson posted:That Jamis guy was such an idiot. I bet he felt like a total dipshit when he died.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 08:07 |
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AlternateAccount posted:So we are just dismissing the failson novels where the Butlerian Jihad involved wars against Terminators? Wiki synopsis of the failson books gave me an aneurysm, they sound worse than bottom barrell Star Wars EU
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 08:10 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:29 |
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Prolonged Panorama posted:There's also the heavy implication that them working on a navigator is preventing or diverting resources from the work that would lead to the out-of-control humanity-ending killing machines Siona sees in her vision. Yeah whatever the Butlerian Jihad was about, it's textual that one possible future of the Dune universe is extinction by Terminator War, and Herbert explicitly links that to the risks of breaking the prohibition on AI.
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# ? Sep 20, 2021 08:25 |