On Nov 8, 6:41 pm,
dav1...@gmail.com wrote:
> If you're not familiar with the film, the kid the film centers on touch's
> the dying deer then with his other hand grabs the shooter and transfers the
> deer's fear into the shooter.
>
I wasn't familiar with it, so I looked it up. I was interested in how
well it fit:
<q> Harley, a sheriff's deputy who is hunting with the boys, has shot
a doe which is now dying. Anguished by the animal's death, Powder
touches the deer and Harley, inducing in Harley what the students
assume is a seizure. Harley later reveals that Powder had caused him
to feel the pain and fear of the dying deer, and he cannot bring
himself to wield a gun anymore because of this, although he hates
Powder for doing this to him. </q>
That might not be coincidence. Years ago I read a sf novelette by
Damon Knight, /Rule Golden/, in which an alien tries to infect the
human race with a virus which gives them that kind of empathy: anyone
who killed a person or higher animal would feel the victim's pain; if
he caused death, the pain to him would kill him; etc. It could be a
common source of inspiration.