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comment by [deleted] · 2022-10-02T02:42:34.356Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
I enjoyed this, especially the slow reveal that the transformation is actually good. I do think it would have been more thematically powerful without the last line. The black goo being passive didn't bother me -- I didn't interpret it as a nanite AI, but just a dumb lifeform that slipped in through a wormhole or something.
I'm looking forwards to tomorrow's post.
Replies from: alexbeyman↑ comment by Alex Beyman (alexbeyman) · 2022-10-02T10:00:03.098Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
The ending is because I normally write horror and take perverse delight in making small additions to wholesome things which totally subvert and ruin them. It's a compulsion at this point, lol.
The black goo is called Vitriol. A sort of a symbolic constant across many of my stories, present in different forms for various purposes. Typically it represents the corrosive hatred we indulge in, a poisoned well we cannot help but keep returning to even as we feel it killing us.
I'm thankful for your readership and will endeavor not to disappoint you. Tomorrow's will be a neat one.
↑ comment by [deleted] · 2022-10-02T13:54:16.215Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
The ending is because I normally write horror and take perverse delight in making small additions to wholesome things which totally subvert and ruin them. It's a compulsion at this point, lol.
I have noticed this tendency. Sometimes it's really well done though, I loved the ending for ||the ehancer story||. (spoilers for another one of Alex's stories)
Replies from: NoriMori1992↑ comment by NoriMori1992 · 2024-04-03T23:27:06.848Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
If you were trying to spoiler tag that, it didn't work.
comment by MSRayne · 2022-10-01T21:54:17.411Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
This is... interesting. I'm not exactly sure what the point is though, and it feels like fanfiction that was written in a stream of consciousness with no revision or planning. In particular I find it hard to believe that an earth-swallowing sea of maximizer AI nano would not... you know, actively do anything other than wait for people to fall into it. 5/10.
Replies from: alexbeyman↑ comment by Alex Beyman (alexbeyman) · 2022-10-01T23:07:33.495Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
"I'm not exactly sure what the point is though"
Not to fear transhumanism, not to regard ourselves as finished products, but also not to assume that more intelligent/powerful = more moral
"an earth-swallowing sea of maximizer AI nano"
That's not what the black sea is, but that angle makes sense in retrospect
↑ comment by MSRayne · 2022-10-02T16:34:34.327Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
Ah, I see. By the way, I didn't intend to sound hostile or condescending but I may have done so, in which case I'm sorry. I think it's evidence you have potential as a writer, and it's probably longer than anything I've ever written lol (I'm terrible at finishing things) - I just would have preferred you go through a revision phase or two before publishing it, and considered how to make the characters a bit more realistic. (For instance, it seems like he adjusts psychologically to the transformation much faster than a normal person would, and suddenly becomes a hero when previously he was just a kid.)
Another possible moral, btw, is that the freedom to develop oneself and experiment with alternative modes of being and organization is part of what makes us human - not our mere body plan. There is a case to be made that the people of Cloud Nine are more human than the people of the Founder's perfect city.
Replies from: alexbeyman↑ comment by Alex Beyman (alexbeyman) · 2022-10-02T20:37:09.869Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
Not to worry, no offense was taken. Indeed though, I have heard it said our ancestors were already cyborgs the minute one of them first sharpened a rock.