Tuesday, April 27, 2010

The Point of Isaac’s God Music

I thoroughly enjoyed our class discussion on Children of God. I think the subject that was most unresolved was the question of Isaac and his DNA music. Essentially, our discussion went from the question ‘was it worth the whole struggle to gain that ambiguous harmony?’ to ‘was it just a way to find something to justify all of the struggles the characters went through?’

While I think it is in our human nature to try to find some sort of meaning out of calamity, some way to say ‘there is a purpose to or meaning in everything’ I think Issac’s discovery was more than Russell’s attempt to give the characters some sort of resolution. While it does seem a little ‘cheap’ that after all Emilio went through he reconciled with God after Isaac’s self-proclaimed discovery of “God’s Music,” his discovery says something profound about human nature.

Whether or not Isaac’s harmony is proof of God’s existence, it is proof of how much we cherish our similarities and connections. The music was so profound to Emilio and many others because it reinforced our view of the sanctity of our alikeness, the commonalities of our experience. It is so profound because it is perhaps our greatest duality. Our fear of the other is only triumphed by our yearning to find ourselves in the other. The realization of that goal is the ideal of most religions and is embodied by Isaac’s God music. It is Russell showing us our own greatest desires and the purpose of religions that strive for peace and harmony yet so often, perhaps unintentionally, take us down a path of fissure and difference. It is our greatest duality.

Synapses Between the Seen and Unseen

Eifelheim presents an interesting paradigm of seen v. unseen knowledge, as discussed on the wiki page. I find it fascinating that both the scientific and religious discourses in the novel involve the unseen. One would typically associate science with the seen and religion with the unseen. However, the multi-dimension and light speed theories Sharon is concerned with are incredibly intangible. The irony of science, a discourse that relies on ‘immutable’ laws, is that when it comes to the most advanced areas like quantum mechanics and theory all the rules cease to apply. I think Flynn, through interweaving Pastor Dietrich’s remarkably ‘seen’ theology and experiential/sensible way of understanding the world and Sharon’s complex science, is making synaptic connections at the chasm between the realms of science and religion. In other words, the two discourses may be more inseparable than previously thought since they both occupy 'hypothetical' and 'real' space.

This “thought experiment” reminds me of the musings of French phenomenologist philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Merleau-Ponty had a notion of the ‘flesh,’ a term which denotes the multilayered connectedness of things, the depth and texture of existence. He describes it in his book The Visible and the Invisible as the miraculous “dehiscence of the seeing into the visible and of the visible into the seeing…the thin pellicle of the quale, the surface of the visible…doubled up over its whole extension with an invisible reserve.”

Through this concept Merleau-Ponty illustrates the mutual interplay between tangible beings and the mute realm of ideas and thoughts. For example, in his book he writes that “a visible is…the surface of a depth, a cross section upon a massive being” and that “pure ideality is itself not without flesh…it lives of them.” Similar to the symbolic the visible is a surface beneath which lies the semiotic, the invisible depth of being. Therefore the two facets, the visible and the invisible, give rise to our full experience of being.

It is fascinating that both science and religion can at once be considered ideas, invisible and tangible experience, visible. Accordingly, ambiguity is central to Eifelheim; reality is absent of concrete distinctions between entities, between the perceptions of the “scientific” Krenken and the “theological” humans.

Intersections of Theology & Science in Eifelheim

In Eifelheim the humans were the primitive Runa of Rakhat and the Krenken the humans. This time the aliens expand our perception of the universe. While reading the book I constantly kept wondering what the Krenken must think of us, 14th century medieval humans. In today’s day and age it is not a period of time we look upon and remember fondly, especially for tolerance of the other. Yet, as has been pointed out by many other people in our class, of all the alien encounter stories we have read this seems to be the most peaceful one. Can we attribute this, as Jackie has said, to the humans’ ignorance and pure dumb luck? I would agree it has to do with our ignorance and lack of awareness. We did not understand the full implications of aliens then. We still had a very limited view of our own world and did not have any means of opposing the Krenken, save diplomacy. Maybe it also has to do with the importance of religion at that place and time, meaning perhaps religion can sometimes actually reduce the fear of the other and encourage kindness or in this case "Christian charity" (I know we don't often think of religion as such in this day and age, but in this story it seems to have such an effect on the villagers.)

I found the conversations between the Krenken and Dietrich fascinating. Some of the conversations seem like a dialogue between science and religion, revealing opportunities for intersections and agreements between the two. Take, for instance, Dietrich and Hans’ discussion of the beginning of the universe. Hans’ explanation of the big bang theory does not seem to entirely preclude Dietrich’s creationism argument. Perhaps there can be a place for theology in science? That seeming paradox is nothing new, Einstein was a profoundly religious or rather spiritual man, yet in the context of a human-alien encounter it is interesting.

According to Hans, “time began when this world and the other world touched… ‘that was the beginning of everything. Someday they will again clap, and all will begin anew (216).’” Essentially he is describing the big bang theory. Dietrich responds with creationism: “But, to press a thing, some actor must press upon it, since no motion exists save by a mover. How might we press upon time (216).” Somehow, after reading this passage, both the scientific and theological arguments seem valid at once to me.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Ignorance and Pure Dumb Luck

During our class discussion of Eifelheim, the question was raised: Why did this encounter between humans and aliens progress more peacefully and happily than most of the others we've read about this semester? In light of this, it hit me that perhaps it was because of the nature of the time and place in which the Krenken found themselves. In my opinion, the Krenken and the humans were able to get along relatively well because of the fact that the humans were unaware of the true implications of the existence of the Krenken. Most of the characters in the book believe that the Krenken are either demons or foreigners--they do not truly grasp the fact that they came from another planet. The very concept of other planets did not exist during this time period; even educated individuals from the Middle Ages believed that the heavens were a sphere that surrounded the Earth and moved around it. For this reason, the idea of aliens was not really comprehendible. And maybe this is the real reason that the humans more or less accepted the Krenken--they didn't have it in their natures to expect anything different from these strange beings.

As Andrew puts it in his blog post, "maybe there's something to that kind of innocence, or even ignorance." Andrew presents a really interesting view by comparing the humans in Eifelheim with the Runa in The Sparrow. Both are ignorant in some way because they do not recognize the new outsiders as truly alien and therefore don't "realize the full extent of [their] 'alien-ness' (Andrew's post). But, as Andrew points out, the lack of understanding that both the Runa and the 14th century Germans experience could easily go the other way and end miserably. Although I don't really like it, Andrew's idea that most things depend on chance is probably right. It all comes back to the idea of chance versus freewill. Do events play out according to our actions or do they happen in spite of our actions? This question relates back to Emilio's question of why The Sparrow ended the way it did. Was it because of something he did or was it all part of something out of his control? In Eifelhiem at least, it seems that the encounter ended successfully because the aliens just happened to land in that specific time and place.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Religion? Story-telling? What are those?

This week, in our discussion of Eifelheim, we focused again on what precipitates the failure to communicate, specifically how the Krenken and the Oberhochwald-ers fail to understand each other. The two groups are not only different species, but they inhabit entirely separate stages of development.

What is most staggering about the disconnect between the Krenken and the humans is the fact that the Krenken do not realize how technologically superior they are to the humans. Considering all the fictions humans have made about contact with alien species, one would expect that a space-faring species like the Krenken would have anticipated one day meeting aliens on another planet. Although their technology is sufficiently advanced to make most 14th century Germans think it is "the work of the Devil," their cultural and anthropological thinking seems to be right on 14th century Germany's level. Although Dietrich seems to have a grasp on nearly all scientific and philosophical thought in his time (as well as an uncanny ability to name future technologies) his presence alone shouldn't reassure the Krenken of humanity's competence. Instead they take it for granted that human stories about "God" who comes "from the sky" are literally tales of other space-faring beings who rule Earth.

The Krenken, although they avoid emotion and tend toward rational thought, somehow avoid rationality in relying on something of which they have no knowledge to save them. The Krenken, who apparently lack a story-telling tradition, do not understand the reason for telling fictions. In fact, they would probably be repulsed by the idea of "lying" to one another. They expect any human account of a savior to be literal. Without the cultural knowledge that some primitive peoples have religion, they lack the necessary tools to achieve "understanding" on a level that allows them to leave Earth alive.

Friday, April 23, 2010

A Genetic Gap in Understanding

Eifelheim is an interesting book to read, as it once again throws us into a situation where humans of the Christian faith make first contact with aliens whose culture is extremely hierarchical. Even compared to feudal Germany, the Krenken have a rigid class system, the laws of which they dare not break. This time though, it is the aliens who are marooned on the primitive planet Earth.

One of the most remarkable parts of the book is the Krenkens’ inability to understand human religious thought. They believe that servants should serve their superiors because the strong should always rule the weak. When they find out that “God, our master who lives in heaven, will come back to save us” they naturally believe that these humans have been contacted by another extraterrestrial race that rules over them. What they initially fail to believe is that humans would make up and spread a story that cannot is not literally true.

While the Krenken hierarchy relies on an order built into their genetic code, humans need a reason to serve other humans. The idea that someone all-powerful individually loves them and plans to reward them after death allows humans to ignore the fact that they have no upward social mobility. Without the reassurance of God (and sometimes with it) humans tend to rebel against or overthrow the hierarchy. The Krenken have no understanding that, for humans, a code of ideas and information informs their culture as heavily as the genetic code informs their physiological make-up.

Freedom and Bloodshed: Not Mutually Exclusive

This week in class (4/15) we talked about Children of God, and one of the interesting topics that came up for discussion was the idea of “freedom.” Are the Runa more “free” now that they dominate the planet and have subjugated the Jana’ata? One answer is that this idea of “freedom” that Sophia and Supaari bring to the Runa is actually an ideal native to human, or Western, thought. On Rakhat, this freedom might be detrimental. When Sophia remembers the quote “do not do unto others what is hateful to you,” (p146) she immediately thinks back to the bloodshed that has marked Earth’s history. Somehow, human ideals of freedom and equality lead to suffering and war.

Maybe the perfect balance of Rakhat civilization was achieved by the realization that not all people are equal. Certainly, the Jana’ata were a predating species and the Runa were a prey species, but there were further distinctions within Jana’ata society. Not all Jana’ata could have children, because the “freedom” of child-bearing would encumber society itself. This brings to mind Todorov’s distinction between sacrifice and massacre. Where humans commit genocide (massacre) as an act of war, the Jana’ata sacrifice their own and others’ lives to prevent the bloating of society that leads to discontent and conflict. What if the humans, believing that they set the other species free, merely led them into a historically unprecedented chaos?

Inter-Species Dynamics- How Groups Adapt to Survive

Children of God followed up on all the questions left by The Sparrow. We finally see all the workings of Jana’ata society from the inside, we see first-hand the Runa insurrection, we see the way alien contact works out with mercenaries instead of priests, and we see the dynamics of groups composed of multiple races against groups composed of a single race. What I thought was most interesting about the book was the way it forces us to re-examine our pre-existing notions about the Jana’ata.

The most interesting quote was on page 225, where Shetri reminds Danny Iron-Horse that “it was not only the Runa who were born to their fate- we all were!” Our sympathies are reversed. The Runa, who were once pitiable in their subservience to the Jana’ata, are now blood-thirsty rebels who follow Sophia and Supaari’s vengeful whims. The Jana’ata, who knew as little that they were doing wrong by eating children as the Runa knew they were by giving up children, are forced onto “reservations.” Their proud hunter society is forced to bow to the wishes of its prey.

The second interesting point of this book is the different alliances of species, and how they manage to work together. It seems that the two most dynamic groups in the novel are the Runa resistance and the Isaac/Ha’anala/Shetri party, both of which are composed of many different species. The strange fact that the Runa resistance is headed by a human being and a Jana’ata outcast leads me to think that the very impressionable Runa are being exploited for human and Jana’ata interests. When Supaari and Sophia both die, perhaps the Runa will be manipulated to some other purpose. Perhaps they are little better than intelligent pack-animals. But perhaps they are the more survivable species because they are better able to adapt.

Ha’anala and Isaac’s group is more complicated because it is led by a Jana’ata and a human who were raised in a Runa camp. They head a party that is mostly Jana’ata, is accepting of all species, and refuses to needlessly kill any sentient being. Somehow, the most morally righteous group in the whole book ends up being a group of disenfranchised Jana’ata, led by a Jana’ata and an autistic human who were both raised in a militant Runa camp. It seems that in Children of God, the most successful groups as well as the most sympathetic, are those that are able to adapt most quickly to changing species-relations.

Darmok, Understanding, and Communication

On Thursday (4/8) we watched “Darmok,” an episode of Star Trek that illustrates the difficulties of communicating with an alien species that has a language structured completely differently from human languages. This brought up the question “what is communication?”

Even the Starfleet universal translator failed to interpret the Darmok language because it used references to Darmok legends in order to communicate abstractions or emotions. As a consequence, the only way to understand the Darmok would be to spend time learning their myths and stories, as well as the syntactical methods of interpreting their meanings.

This lesson of understanding might be useful in some of the other novels we read. In order to make Picard understand, the Darmok force him to engage in a Darmok bonding ritual. Many of our novels involve attempts at understanding species whose languages are known. As Sandoz says in The Sparrow, “The ability to speak a language perfectly does not necessarily convey any understanding of it.” (p232) In a way, the Stella Maris crew understands as little about Rakhati culture as the Enterprise crew does about Darmok. Even after living with the Runa, the humans don’t know anything of Jana’ata-Runa relations, and they attempt to involve themselves in them before having a complete understanding. This strikes me as a failure to communicate.

Cultural Infection in The Sparrow

Ok I've been putting it off for a long time, but here's the Conquest of America post. Even though everyone knows slow and steady wins the race, I really need to get up to speed on my blogging. One of the most interesting concepts that Todorov puts forth in Conquest of America is the distinction that the Spaniards make between themselves and the Aztecs. On page 153, he quotes an account that compares the natives to women, children, and monkeys. Each station denotes a greater differentiation from the status "man."

One of the great difficulties we’ve been having talking about the Jana’ata from The Sparrow is that we have been trying to judge them as we would judge humans. Unlike the Aztecs, who were humans, the Jana’ata and Runa are unequivocally not human. Like the Aztecs, they are alien and, to our sensibilities, sometimes savage. Of course they are not exactly animals either. But the flaw in our approach to the aliens is to misidentify them with humans.

Introducing technology, agriculture, and rebellion to the alien culture was nearly as fatal in The Sparrow as the Spaniards’ introduction of their own culture (and diseases and warfare) to Mexico. What the humans failed to realize is that, as the (potentially) dominant species, their influence would inevitably dominate the other species’ ways of life. Now civil violence and overpopulation are blighting the formerly placid Rakhat civilization. They might have saved some trouble by sending an army.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

M is for Miscommunication

Throughout Eifelheim I was just waiting for the other shoe to drop. From the first moment that the Krenken started becoming interested in Jesus Christ and his proposed return to Earth, it was pretty clear that Dietrich and the Krenken were not on the same page. I was, frankly, surprised when nothing serious arose from this miscommunication. It is a pretty severe difference to see Jesus as the son of God and humanity's savior and to see him as a being from space who can help a group of aliens get back home. The worst part about this confusion was that their interpretation made sense. If you read Dietrich's explanations while imagining that you have no knowledge of Christianity or the One God, but have a good understanding of space travel, the Krenken's assumptions are completely reasonable. Taking religion literally rather than figuratively is a problem even within human society. And misinterpretations of religious ideas and messages are a common source of problems and conflicts.

One example of one such unfortunate misinterpretation can be found here. Basically, a sect of churches in South Korea had predicted that, on a specific day in 1992, the faithful would ascend to heaven. This would then be followed by seven years of trials and, finally, the Armageddon. Clearly, this is a pretty serious claim to make. It led many followers to sell their belongings, leave their jobs, and abandon their families. The church simply apologized, saying that they misinterpreted the Bible. That's one extreme misinterpretation..."Oh, sorry...we thought the world was going to end. Our bad."

It's examples like this that made me think that Eifelheim was going to end badly. I was honestly underwhelmed when the remaining Krenken just stayed peacefully among the villagers. Since most of them were expecting Herr Jesus to appear any day, it seemed that they would become frustrated when that didn't happen. And somehow, the majority of them managed to fly off without the Second Coming. What did that mean to the Krenken believers? In any case, the Krenken who were converted did demonstrate that their manners and attitudes were, to some extent, altered by their newfound religion. However, it still seems that they could never truly understand the Christian belief system because of its basis in human culture, and even human biology. As the book points out, God made humans in his image, and the Krenken clearly do not fit into this image. So, while the Krenken adopt some of the practices and attitudes of Christians, they do not truly understand what it is they are incorporated into. It's impossible because of their vastly different points of reference and cultures.