On 11/11/2012 07:47, Robert Carnegie wrote:
> On Saturday, 10 November 2012 13:42:53 UTC, A.G.McDowell wrote:
>> The Dark Side of the Sun - The cover of my edition of this makes it look
>> exactly like a book in the Discworld series, which it isn't. For all
>> that, it's interesting enough. There is a nice idea towards the end - a
>> race that creates intelligent life throughout the galaxy so it can
>> evolve and offer independent viewpoints. I'd like to see this on a
>> smaller scale - if we can't meet extra-terrestrial aliens, could we
>> profit by fostering diverse cultures on one planet?
>
> Do y�ou think we haven't? Although they're all made of
> human beings.
>
> In Warren Ellis's _Transmetropolitan_, the enormous
> City in the middle of the U.S. has "reservations"
> for multiple alternative human cultures, including
> from memory Chinese communism, whichever of the ancient
> South Americans practiced human sacrifice, and
> post-human turn-your-body-into-something-weird.
> Maintaining different lifestyles and outlooks is
> precisely the point of these.
>
> Robert Silverberg's planet Majipoor setting is
> multi-species.
Thanks for the reference. I've come across Majipoor, but not
Transmetropolitan. Yes, we have different cultures - both from different
histories/ethnic groups, and from different professional upbringings.
Deliberately created cultures could be further from the existing
cultures, might be created in an attempt to produce specific desired
qualities in their members, or might be created with random
characteristics simply to find out whether characteristic A produces
characteristic B, or vice versa. One easy way to create a
self-consistent very different culture would be to revive a previous
culture for which there are good records. I suspect that somebody
brought up in Victorian London in the era of Canon Doyle/Sherlock Holmes
would have an interesting perspective on modern society, and would be
interested rather than intimidated or hostile to modern technology. I
wouldn't like to go back too far beyond that, though.