What we diagnose is scarcity

Eloise 2022-06-20 20:17:45

People have always wanted to know what a better self looks like, and this drama shows the topic in a light-hearted way, which makes people's eyes shine. Very similar to this setting is Schwarzenegger's "Sixth Day", which is a blockbuster that really unfolds from all aspects of conspiracy, action, technology, and ethics. This film does not try to explore this issue from such an ambitious level, but takes a very light point-from the relationship with his wife-to start it, which makes people feel a bit tricky and unfinished. Of course, Ant-Man's casting is very good, the performance is also very good, and the whole film is also soaked in the atmosphere of light comedy, just like the commercial film in it, the feeling of friends and family.

Why the new miles are so energetic may be because the new body has not really experienced the negative emotional effects of trauma, exhaustion, anger, and fear, leaving no physical "scars", while people's psychology is to a large extent. It is affected by the physiological state, the new body is like a bud, everything is still fresh and kind to it, so that people's spirit is also full of vitality and tolerance.

If I was a new mile, I might choose the world is very big, I want to go and see, and then meet a new girl (after all, it can be seven times a day haha), do what I have always wanted to do without doing a lot, just like the old one at the beginning Like the plan given by miles, this is what a so-called normal person would do. But the premise of doing this is that there is no concern, otherwise it can only end in life-and-death or compromise.

Some people may become a very good friend or even a lover with another self (there is a pair of women in a parallel world in "Relative Universe". After meeting, the two become life partners and share a husband, in "Previous Destination". There is even a plot of oneself and oneself giving birth to oneself, which is amazing).

Some people may kill the other self, or commit suicide (Hugh Jackman in "Deadly Magic" does not hesitate to commit suicide over and over again to complete a great performance).

The pair of Korean masseuses (partners? couples?) in the play are also very interesting characters, and no one has done such a great business so down to earth.

The wife's reaction is also very logical, from surprise at the beginning, to anger, to trying, to repentance, to awakening. In fact, our concern for a person or a thing is more important than the reluctance to part with our own life, because that experience is exchanged for the time or life that has passed, and every intimate person or thing is It is a time capsule, and our feelings for it are actually feelings for our own life. In essence, it is because each of us only has one life, so what is rare is more valuable. But what if this premise is broken? Just like the settings in "Altered Carbon", some people have been changing their bodies since they were born. Only the chip used to store brain information remains the same. In such a world , what people cherish is not their original body but the chip, and this is also based on the scarcity of the chip, that is, the clone of the chip in the story will be sentenced to death, so no one dares to break through this bottom line.

Where is the boundary of ethics, it is the boundary of science and technology that grows and grows with each other, and what is scarce is what we cherish.

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