andrewducker: (wikipedia)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2009-01-27 08:58 am

I don't remember posting this

Reading the article here I went through a variety of stages.  At the end of page one I felt that I would rather be dead than be in the same situation as Clive, trapped in a world that I could not understand, constantly living in terror and incomprehension.  And then by the end of page two I felt that maybe it would be something I could live with.  And then by the end of the article I just didn't know.

It's a fascinating piece, and it highlights just how fragile the world we live in is, dependent as we are on a small and easily damaged lump of grey porridge-like good.

[Poll #1338336]

[identity profile] martling.livejournal.com 2009-01-27 09:37 am (UTC)(link)
I vote for dead.

Think of it this way: every "reawakening" of Clive is a fresh consciousness doomed to die in the next five seconds, and not have a great time in between.

The strain on the person's carers must be immense, too. I'd never want to cause that.

[identity profile] martling.livejournal.com 2009-01-27 10:54 am (UTC)(link)
My point isn't so much about the duration, as the clearly confused and uncomfortable nature of each period. And the near-certainty, based on thousands of previous trials, that this is what will happen each time.