"Sixth Day" tells a story about clones around Adam the clone. Human bodies and even minds can be cloned, i.e., almost identical, as in Deadly Magic. Consistent proposition: technology changes life, technology is neutral, and the evil is the human heart.
The average tech fantasy will have a brilliant scientist and a political conspiracy manipulating the scientist. I think the classic three-minute dialogue:
Dr.: My wife, Katherine, is dead! (died from untreatable fibrocyst)
Michael: God! . . . Griffin, I didn't know, I'm so sorry
Doctor : Don't start with sorry! do not do that! Don't start with sorry! (groaning). I know it's congenital and you put it in DNA, my wife, Johnny (one of the thugs), and others (all clones) but Michael, why my wife? why?
Michael: You're right, Griffin, this is a security draft I've implemented that I know you won't understand
Doctor: So what am I supposed to understand? The only thing I know: you gave my wife a fibrocystic! (angry)
Michael: Calm some people made some mistakes that doesn't mean it hurt her
DR: it didn't hurt her, it killed her
Michael: Suppose we cloned a congressman who supported us but he changed his mind or Johnny Short lives allow us to control them when asking for more money
Doctor: What are you talking about? What's the point?
Michael: The point is that if they're going to betray us they're dead if they're obedient we can keep cloning them the truth is we're going to do that to Katherine I'm sure she's cloned by now
Dr: No she doesn't
Michael: Griffin It's just a blunder (sorry) if you care about her DNA you go and clone her for free.
DR: Free cloning then thank you so much why you still don't understand that she doesn't want to be cloned
Michael: Whatever, just
do it Doc: Whatever, just do it. . . I get it. Let me explain something to you. I love my wife so much. (affectionately) I won't even break my promise to never bring her back to life again and if I can't keep her alive I'll never bring anyone back to life again. That is my love for her. So it was all over and I quit. . .
Michael: I can't get you out of here
Doctor: I found that I used to think too much and I argued with you too much so. . . . I'm going to end this and this is the end
Michael: Know what I'm going to do for you?
Doctor: What are you going to do for me?
Michael: I'm going to give you a gift you can't imagine.
Doctor: Gift?
Michael: I'm going to save your life. I'm going to save Katherine's life. I'm going to save our friendship and your marriage
. Doctor : What are you talking about?
Michael: (draws gun and reloads) Now I'm going to kill you and clone you with your latest code and then I'll clone Katherine, you understand? Look what I've done for you and you'll be reunited again. Neither he nor you will remember that you promised not to clone her or even that she was dead and of course you won't remember our conversation today. (shot)
It took God six days to create mankind, but it took less than six days for mankind to create mankind! Humans are really bluer than blue! Cloning, human beings can live forever, that's great, but it doesn't feel so great when your resurrection has to be controlled by some god! Who am I if there are many mes at the same time? Or who am I? If a person is a small universe, there are many parallel universes. Or, similar to what we see as fish in a small pond in a park, they are cloned many times, and it is not a problem for us. If you don't need labels, you don't need identification, and you don't need to be unique, everything doesn't seem to be a problem. I am reminded of another way of copying in the Four Parts of a Space Odyssey: upload awareness to the computer, make yourself a series of data streams, and travel in circuit loops. Don't ask me is it still me? As long as we continue to think and create, we are human beings. As for the chaos caused by these, but, when will the world be free from war? The story begins with a new technology, but can develop and end in many ways: eliminating technology; eliminating the enemy; eliminating oneself; or checks and balances, such as nuclear deterrence. Whatever, the point is, some of us can survive, survive, and have hope for the future.
The United States doesn’t have much history to write, so we can only think about the future. If we eat and run away, we have nothing to do with expensive sci-fi movies. If we have a nightmare, we can start making disaster movies. We have five thousand years of splendid civilization history to write. Legendary characters and historical stories, there are 1.3 billion parents, and we still have so many dynasties to travel through, so we won't be so poor that we want to make sci-fi movies.
Focus on reality, don't worry about it. But, facing the starry sky, facing the future, facing the unknown space and time, you are not curious and incomprehensible, are you inhuman? For so many years, those splendid miracles cannot be encountered in life, diligently seeking infinite time and space.
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