What "The Three-Body Problem" teaches you
The naivety and kindness of humanity in the face of the universe reveals a paradox: on Earth, humanity can step into another continent without fear and destroy its fellow citizens through war and plague. However, when they gaze at the stars, they become sensual, believing that if extraterrestrial civilizations exist, they are of course universal, noble, morally bound civilizations, as if cherishing other civilizations is a matter of course for cosmic code of conduct.
Strictly speaking, the three-body problem didn't teach me anything.
I didn't understand it before. Why is the first of the seven deadly sins arrogant, I understand after reading the three-body problem, although the other six deadly sins are all making mistakes, but they all know their own behavior. And the terrible thing about arrogance is that they don't feel that they are making a mistake, and since they are not making a mistake, then why should they correct it?That's why Cheng Xin made mistakes again and again, but forgave himself again and again. Because Cheng Xin has an extreme arrogance, and he is proud of this arrogance, and he doesn't want to correct it at all.
Two saw blades are tied together to cut the rope, and it is not obvious that it has been cut by man.
I suddenly thought of another metaphor for Ye Wenjie's story.
is Ye Wenjie's sentence, "I lit the fire, but I couldn't control it." ”
Ye originally wanted to use alien strength to transform human civilization, which was the idealism in her heart. I didn't expect that the three-body organization would eventually develop to ***
In the grander the narrative.
The development of things only follows the basic logic of operation.
Human sentimentality and wishful thinking are the most useless.
The boiling water of fate is randomly poured on the head of which pile of ants, not because you are bad, nor because you are not worthy, try to accept the irreversible fate, and then continue to be busy.
The collective memory of humanity is short-lived, fanatical, and has a backlash. Even the history books of mankind are one-sided views after deconstruction. The only lesson that humanity has learned from history is that it has not learned any lessons from history.
After watching "The Three-Body Problem", I felt that human beings are even more insignificant, not only in the universe, but also in human society.
You talk to him about science, and he talks to you about science fiction, but the two are stupid and unclear, and the level of knowledge is too different.
Within the cone of light is fate.