Author Topic: EP081: Margin of Error  (Read 4421 times)

Swamp

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on: October 17, 2009, 10:09:26 PM
EP081: Margin of Error

By Nancy Kress.
Read by Christiana Ellis

She said, “What the project needs is for you to come back and work on the same small area you did originally. Looking for something–anything–you might have missed in the protein-coded instructions to successive generations of nanoassemblers.”

“No,” I said.


Rated PG. Contains minor profanity, explicit bodily functions, and people being very, very mean.


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Reply #1 on: February 11, 2010, 03:23:32 PM
I really disliked this one.

It seemed like I was supposed to relate to the protagonist somehow, but I just really didn't.  She was a psychopath through and through.  Her sister wasn't likable either, but she was the lesser of two evils.

So... if you don't want to be a mommy, you deserve to die?  And, while I don't like the sister, inflicting her with cancer if she doesn't see things your way is evil, cold, and evil.

It sounds like the nanos will give immortality or something near it, at least protection from aging.  The world is overpopulated as it is, so if you suddenly provide a product that significantly increases lifespan then there'd better be a way to reduce birthrates simultaneously or you're just multiplying the problem.  With all of our medical science these days, the birth rate has also gone down a lot from what it was a few centuries ago--this makes total sense because these days the survival rate of the kids is very very high compared to those days.  So if most of the population gains extreme longevity and at the same time makes themselves sterile, I don't really see where the problem is.  The protagonist wants to have kids, and no one is trying to stop her, so what's the problem?  She can have all the babies she wants, and can continue with her own scientific experiments at home, perhaps even ones which undermine her sister's work.  Instead of stewing over it, she could do something with her talent.  But if infecting her sister with cancer is really the best solution she can come up with, then she's not much of a scientist or much of a human being.  I shudder to think what her twisted mind will do to her children.

And, with this one combined with Nano Comes to Clifford Falls, it's hard not to perceive a continued message telling me how important it is to have kids.  Since I don't really have any desire to have kids, this bugs me.  I realize the characters aren't the author, and this is a very small sample size, but it's not much of a jump to conclusion since these two stories ran only 6 weeks or so apart.  This is probably multiplied by the fact that I heard them 2 days apart.

That said it was well-written.  I hope to hear more Nancy Kress, but hopefully with a broader range of themes.



Boggled Coriander

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Reply #2 on: February 12, 2010, 01:09:38 AM
It seemed like I was supposed to relate to the protagonist somehow, but I just really didn't.  She was a psychopath through and through.  Her sister wasn't likable either, but she was the lesser of two evils.

I can't claim to be able to see inside Nancy Kress's brain, but my impression was that the reader wasn't meant to identify with either character, except maybe in a purely intellectual way: you're supposed to understand why Karen has come to be so heartless toward her sister, but you're not supposed to agree with her actions.  It's a character-based piece, but neither character is meant to be sympathetic.

But that's just what I took from the story -- I didn't get all that from inscribed stone tablets that Kress herself left by my door.
« Last Edit: February 12, 2010, 01:46:07 AM by Boggled Coriander »

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Reply #3 on: February 12, 2010, 02:45:58 PM

But that's just what I took from the story -- I didn't get all that from inscribed stone tablets that Kress herself left by my door.

It would've been cool if you had.  Then you could post pictures and sell them on eBay!  :)



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Reply #4 on: February 20, 2016, 07:08:41 PM
I really disliked this one.

It seemed like I was supposed to relate to the protagonist somehow, but I just really didn't.  She was a psychopath through and through.  Her sister wasn't likable either, but she was the lesser of two evils.

So... if you don't want to be a mommy, you deserve to die?  And, while I don't like the sister, inflicting her with cancer if she doesn't see things your way is evil, cold, and evil.

It sounds like the nanos will give immortality or something near it, at least protection from aging.  The world is overpopulated as it is, so if you suddenly provide a product that significantly increases lifespan then there'd better be a way to reduce birthrates simultaneously or you're just multiplying the problem.  With all of our medical science these days, the birth rate has also gone down a lot from what it was a few centuries ago--this makes total sense because these days the survival rate of the kids is very very high compared to those days.  So if most of the population gains extreme longevity and at the same time makes themselves sterile, I don't really see where the problem is.  The protagonist wants to have kids, and no one is trying to stop her, so what's the problem?  She can have all the babies she wants, and can continue with her own scientific experiments at home, perhaps even ones which undermine her sister's work.  Instead of stewing over it, she could do something with her talent.  But if infecting her sister with cancer is really the best solution she can come up with, then she's not much of a scientist or much of a human being.  I shudder to think what her twisted mind will do to her children.

And, with this one combined with Nano Comes to Clifford Falls, it's hard not to perceive a continued message telling me how important it is to have kids.  Since I don't really have any desire to have kids, this bugs me.  I realize the characters aren't the author, and this is a very small sample size, but it's not much of a jump to conclusion since these two stories ran only 6 weeks or so apart.  This is probably multiplied by the fact that I heard them 2 days apart.

That said it was well-written.  I hope to hear more Nancy Kress, but hopefully with a broader range of themes.


Got to say, I completely agree with you on this. I really didn't like either of the characters and I didn't care for either of the stories. Both seem to suggest that technology is 'bad' and that we should all go back to working in the fields. It gives a bad and indeed false impression on science and scientific discovery and I don't believe the arguments are well thought through. Also both stories appear to place unpleasant stereotypes on gender and sexuality. Not impressed.