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The Official Battlestar Galactica Season 3 Live Thread (Est/Cst)
10/06/06 | Kevin Davis

Posted on 10/06/2006 5:39:03 PM PDT by KevinDavis

Well this is the live thread for Season 3 of Battlestar Galactica.. Basically for people who lives in the Eastern and Central times zones. There will be another thread for the Western Time Zone...

So say we all..


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: battlestar; battlestargalactica; bsg; frak; galacitca; season3
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To: KevinDavis


Dang. Missed the live thread.
Can I get on the ping list?
441 posted on 11/10/2006 8:40:11 PM PST by Liberty Valance (Keep a simple manner for a happy life)
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To: KevinDavis
As a result of this episode the humans have all the guilt of committing genocide (if that is what it would have been) without gaining the safety of accomplishing it. Essentially the President and Commander gave the orders, but there was a system failure (Helo being part of the system).
442 posted on 11/10/2006 8:56:27 PM PST by Lucius Cornelius Sulla (I went down in 1964 for Barry Goldwater with all flags flying! This is just a blip!)
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To: Hawk1976

I don't see what the problem with destroying the cylons. If mankind feels bad about it later on, they can always make some more.


443 posted on 11/10/2006 9:08:40 PM PST by dpa5923 (Small minds talk about people, normal minds talk about events, great minds talk about ideas.)
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To: marajade
How can you commit genocide on a computer?

Probably the same way that you have a baby with one. Reckon them as intelligent, sentient beings.

It is a science fiction programme, let's not loose our perspective here.

444 posted on 11/10/2006 9:44:38 PM PST by Calvinist_Dark_Lord (I have come here to kick @$$ and chew bubblegum...and I'm all outta bubblegum! ~Roddy Piper)
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To: Calvinist_Dark_Lord

Is it really genocide when the humans could just more of them? Wouldn't genocide mean wiping them out forever?


445 posted on 11/10/2006 9:46:23 PM PST by dpa5923 (Small minds talk about people, normal minds talk about events, great minds talk about ideas.)
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To: dpa5923
Is it really genocide when the humans could just more of them? Wouldn't genocide mean wiping them out forever?

Humans didn't build the 'Skinjobs', the cylons did. Humans built the 'walking Chrome Toasters'.

You really think that they'd make that mistake again?

446 posted on 11/10/2006 9:48:20 PM PST by Calvinist_Dark_Lord (I have come here to kick @$$ and chew bubblegum...and I'm all outta bubblegum! ~Roddy Piper)
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To: Calvinist_Dark_Lord; All

Moral Dilema Episode...


447 posted on 11/10/2006 10:02:00 PM PST by KevinDavis (Nancy you ignorant Slut!!!!!)
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To: KevinDavis
Moral Dilema Episode...

On another issue, notice how Adama is beginning to treat Helo as if he was another son? It appears to have started with the Epiphanes episode, when Helo attempted to stop them from aborting his and Sharon's baby. i thought a bunch of Colonial Marines were about to die.

i'm waiting for the explosion that is going to happen when Capt. Agathon finally lashes out at somebody. This guy has taken all the $#!t that a person can, and kept on smiling...there does however, come a time....

448 posted on 11/10/2006 10:08:47 PM PST by Calvinist_Dark_Lord (I have come here to kick @$$ and chew bubblegum...and I'm all outta bubblegum! ~Roddy Piper)
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To: Hawk1976
In the show, you can be sure the writers will never allow one quote possible outcome of Helo's action to happen in the show -- the Cylon fleet stumbles into them and decides to wipe out all of the humans. If that happened, would you still think Helo made a good choice? What if Sharon has some more of that residual code and she starts up sabotaging the ship again? Still good choices? Remember, the Cylons only didn't kill all humans because they missed a few. And let's not forget the women being used for experiments on Caprica, the mindgames with Starbuck using a child, and so on.

With respect to moral equivalency and becomming just like your enemy, it's important to remember context. The Cylons started the war. The Cylons tried to exterminate all humans. The Cylons have been not simply murderous but cruel. They made it into an exterminate or be exterminated issue.

449 posted on 11/10/2006 10:57:19 PM PST by Question_Assumptions
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To: marajade
The orders were wrong, Adama didn't launch an investigation because even he thought it. Roslyn didn't order Adama to launch an investigation, when she could have. What does that say about the orders.
450 posted on 11/11/2006 5:38:47 AM PST by Hawk1976 (And for my next trick I will use splel chuck.)
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To: Question_Assumptions

Humans have the ability to be murderous and cruel. We also have the choice to not be murderous and cruel. Cylons also seem to have the ability to make that choice, it is not a choice that has presented to them to make.

Sharon didn't just violate her code once. She did it a number of times.


451 posted on 11/11/2006 5:46:14 AM PST by Hawk1976 (And for my next trick I will use splel chuck.)
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To: Hawk1976

This is the first episode that I thought Roslin acted with any sense.

The experience on New Caprica seemd to have matured her.


452 posted on 11/11/2006 6:22:13 AM PST by BenLurkin ("The entire remedy is with the people." - W. H. Harrison)
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To: KevinDavis; All
I'm a little frustrated right now with some of the writing. I know there is only so much they can show in a one hour segment, but there is so much of the story being left out. They had all of these people living under a forced occupation who are not thrown back together with the rest of the fleet. That's a major potential for conflict and we've seen very little about it. We're asked to accept that the Chief and Callie just slid happily right back into their old jobs. Does Galactica have daycare? Who watches Callie's baby?

Adama kicks Starbuck out of her chair and tells her she's no longer like a daughter to him and Apollo yanks her off flight status. But we're supposed to believe that a few days later she's allowed to command a mission? Because she chopped her hair off and took a shower?

Apollo was a Commander and now he's back to being a major. He went from CO of a Battlestar to CAG. There's a storyline right there- how did they reintegrate the crews?

I still love the show, but if we keep getting these logical disconnects, I'm going to be a little less in love.
453 posted on 11/11/2006 6:49:10 AM PST by brothers4thID (Being lectured by Ted Kennedy on ethics is not unlike being lectured on dating protocol by Ted Bundy)
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To: brothers4thID
I'm wondering if the webisodes that were held up by NBC tie into how people were reintegrated within the fleet.

I don't know about Starbuck, but Apollo seemed most comfortable as CAG, and had he decided to go the XO route, you would have had father-son tension, as well as it makes for better story-telling-TV to have a strong character like Apollo be the leader away from the ship. As an XO, he couldn't do that.
454 posted on 11/11/2006 9:14:34 AM PST by af_vet_rr
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To: Calvinist_Dark_Lord

They are still programmed machines built by machines.


455 posted on 11/11/2006 2:05:58 PM PST by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: marajade
They are still programmed machines built by machines.

If you can place any credibility in Skinner and his ilk, so are we. Many human biological functions (such as blood sugar/insulin curves) are classic problems in feedback control systems text books.

Certain parts of that are debatable. Recalling that the story is Science fiction, remember that Sharon rebelled against programming when she took Helo in different directions than she was instructed to do on Caprica.

456 posted on 11/11/2006 9:56:08 PM PST by Calvinist_Dark_Lord (I have come here to kick @$$ and chew bubblegum...and I'm all outta bubblegum! ~Roddy Piper)
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To: Calvinist_Dark_Lord

"Certain parts of that are debatable. Recalling that the story is Science fiction, remember that Sharon rebelled against programming when she took Helo in different directions than she was instructed to do on Caprica."

But she still forgot to tell that Brother Nevil was a cylon.


457 posted on 11/12/2006 8:26:53 AM PST by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: marajade

Cavil. Brother Cavil.

Any idea on who you think will be the, "Imperious Leader," in this series?


458 posted on 11/12/2006 8:44:11 AM PST by RandallFlagg (Suddenly, there'll be LOTS of GOOD NEWS coming out of Iraq from CNN (PUKE!))
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To: Hawk1976
Humans have the ability to be murderous and cruel. We also have the choice to not be murderous and cruel.

Please read this article and this article. In particulare, compare the example that Dr. Hare gives that he suggested for the movie Malice with the scene between Capria 6 and the baby in the miniseries. The problem is that almost all of the evidence in the show is that the Cylons are all psychopaths without a conscience.

What gives a human "humanity" and makes them truly trustworthy is a conscience. A human without a conscience can never really be trusted, because they lack the conscience and empathy that make normal humans consider the impact of their behavior on other. All of the evidence so far, from Caprica 6 and the baby through the occupation of New Caprica and treatment of Baltar by Caprica 6 suggest that the Cylons lack any real conscience or empathy. It's all about them.

What about Sharon? A lot of her behavior is self-centered and about what she needs. When her needs change, so does her behavior. Do you expect her to remain a good soldier if she finds out that the baby was alive and she was lied to? I don't. She's a bomb waiting to blow up, just as she was before she shot Adama. Let's not forget that she's changed her mood and mind over and over again, as the situation changes. What makes you sure tht this is the real Sharon and not just act?

But let's assume that Sharon and the Caprica that loves Baltar have some small measure of empathy and conscience. Hare and others estimate that up to 4% of all people are psychopaths, with only a fraction of those becomming serial killers and so forth. The rest become those people who use and abuse others for fun and profit and just can't be trusted. Let's flip that percentage around. Let's suppose that 4% of Cylons actually have a conscience. Can humans really put their entire future and the survival of their species at risk in the hope that either the psychopaths will leave them alone or the 4% will be able to control the other 96%? Where do you think things would have cone on New Caprica if the people hadn't left, given that the executions were starting?

In short, I think you are projecting human assumptions onto machines that aren't human (and to the credit of the writers, don't think or act quite like normal humans). Consider this quote, from the second article, "Since everyone simply assumes that conscience is universal among human beings, hiding the fact that you are conscience-free is nearly effortless." Don't assume the Cylons have a conscience because nearly everything we've seen so far suggests that they don't.

459 posted on 11/12/2006 9:48:33 AM PST by Question_Assumptions
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To: Calvinist_Dark_Lord
If you can place any credibility in Skinner and his ilk, so are we.

Normal Humans are not a blank slate. They come with the capacity to feel empathy, feel guilt when they wrong others, and have a visceral negative response to things they think are unfair. See the two articles on psychopaths that I listed above as well as this article which talks about why "Scientists say morality may be hardwired into our brains by evolution".

In short, if you remove the emotional response that people have toward certain moral decisions, you don't get humane decisions. You get ruthlessly efficient ones. Remove empathy and a conscience and you get decisions based on self-interest without regard for others. So unless you hardwire your machines with a consience (e.g., Asimov's 3 Laws of Robotics), empathy, and a visceral sense of fairness, you won't get humane behavior. You'll get ruthlessly efficient and selfish behavior. And that's exactly how the writers are portraying the Cylons in most cases.

460 posted on 11/12/2006 10:00:40 AM PST by Question_Assumptions
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