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Children in A.F. 10

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Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Children in A.F. 10
There are children in Eclipse Phase; the wombs of the solar system, both organic and robotic alike, didn't just suddenly become barren eight years before the Fall. Thing is, for all its detail, I can only thing of one reference, at all, to children in EP, and it was an off-hand reference to children calling each others "droolers' if they spend too long searching for things. So, my ponderance here is, what is it like growing up in the EP setting? I restrict that question to those who grew up off-world and were not directly involved with the Fall. By that, I mean that they didn't see their whole families converted into Exsurgents and what-not. Seeing civil unrest and massive influxes of refugees is entirely understandable, and being witness to the obliteration of New Mumbai and the subsequent paranoia is fine too, but I don't mean kids who were entirely uprooted or forced into indenturehood and so on. What is it like for the majority of children in EP? It's clearly different from today, but how?
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I *still* don't understand how the whole children and morphs/uploading issue works, even after a couple threads touching on it. Are they immature egos in mature morphs? Etc. I'll be interested in what others think. :)
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Children don't tend to resleeve, I'd assume, until they come to be a certain age. If they do, it's an exceptional circumstance, most likely.
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Possibly. I have no idea. That assumes their parents are in some morphs that can breed, and I'm not even sure which that includes (Flats and Splicers, definitely, and very probably Exalt/Sylph/Menton/Olympian; Remade? Fury?). It's kind of a strange question: EP is 'post-scarcity', so there's no huge problem with feeding (/clothing/educating) offspring, but there *are* questions of living space, possibly breathing air, and the fact that morphs are almost a prized luxury is a major point of the setting, right? Are people who breed selfish, or are they just helping create more morphs (nevermind that they're in use by a new ego)? Heh. Does pregnancy in vivo even happen, or is it Brave New World, or something much stranger? I wince to ask this stuff again and again, but I'm really enjoying wrapping myself around the setting.
TBRMInsanity TBRMInsanity's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Because of the mental strain of resleeving before puberty, children are usually not allowed to resleeve (this was one of the causes of the "Lost" generation). Now certain factions don't have "children" in the traditional sense. Groups like the Scum and Ultimates merge alpha forks together and then resleeve this new entity into a custom morph. This new ego has the advantage of having both parent's memories and experiences, but can mould its own personality over time. Gives a new meaning to Brangalina.
Jovian Motto: Your mind is original. Preserve it. Your body is a temple. Maintain it. Immortality is an illusion. Forget it.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I doubt there's any faction, except maybe certain Ultimates and Posthuman clades, that don't reproduce in the traditional manner anymore. I have no doubt that experimental forms of reproduction, like alpha fork merging, is practiced by some, but it is still, as noted, experimental. As for HOW people breed, in vivo or not, I figure both still happen but it's now optional. Parents can just as easily create a hybrid of their DNA in a lab and either implant it in one of them or an artificial womb, or they can do it the old fashioned way if they're compatible. As for questions of post-scarcity, I think you'll find that the people who breed aren't really selfish outside of the most broken down ships/habitats, where air circulation is strained to its limits; a child hardly takes up much living room as a child and, as an adult, they're contributing to the economy and infrastructure of the society in which they live. But I have to nudge this back on topic: I wasn't asking about where the kids come from, I'm asking what their upbringing is like, and their place in society. How do they learn, interact with peers, etc.?
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
:) I think the 'tangent' is fundamental to that question, is all. Let's assume that there's totally 'normal' pregnancy and birth, then. We know that kids have muses, ever-present nanny/tutor/deity things, so that covers education and child care. There's the mesh, so there's entertainment and socializing all the time. In what sense do people still 'work', in EP? Is there child labor? Are there child protection laws (obviously, a massively context-dependent question)? Apart from socializing, education (including cultural indoctrination), and let's call it 'reality acclimation', what else is childhood for? How about a little post-GATTACA: is psychosurgery used on kids, for the purpose of normalizing them (to what standard)? Muses do therapy, perhaps constantly, as part of some kind of optimized child-rearing program? TLDR version: I'm assuming individual-hyper-internet lifestyle is 'normal'. Probably there are primitivists and any number of unique enclaves, but that's the 'normal'.
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Axel the Chimeric wrote:
So, my ponderance here is, what is it like growing up in the EP setting? I restrict that question to those who grew up off-world and were not directly involved with the Fall.
Well who was off-world? We have three large populations (I'm not including Luna, because they were pretty well involved with the Fall). You have people who were planet-side, mostly on Mars, possibly also on Venus, and were comfortable enough to have kids. For the most part, these people are modern and comfortable enough that life as a child was similar to life on Earth as a child - they lived in comfortable habitats, worked, went to school, played and so on. They were still children of the frontier, so there was no end of work and many difficulties they weren't used to. Children on Mars who weren't specialized splicers or otherwise genetically modified grew like weeds in the low gravity. Second population were people in contained stations - Cole habitats, toruses and such, from Sol to Jupiter (and maybe a few more further out). Growing up here is tidier than growing up on a planet. There are fewer environmental issues, but plenty of mechanical tasks to keep them busy. This would make for a much more urban environment than living planetside, on average more technical and perhaps better educated, since their basic survival relies on orbital mechanics, life support systems and so on. Finally you have the ships, the forerunners of scum barges and so on. These are smaller than the habitats, and have sharper gaps between their maximum and minimum work loads. They'd have plenty of empty time to fill up, interspersed with weeks of tons of activity. Space is cramped, resources slimmer. Education and employment needs really span the gamut. All of them benefit from all sorts of educational methods over the mesh. All of them would need to fill in gaps in the work to be done around their homes. All of them would need to learn a lot of technical skills (although some MUCH MORE than others). Kids spend plenty of time on the mesh to hang out with friends across the system, but thanks to lag, they'll still prefer people in the local neighborhood (which means those merchant ships are still VERY lonely). People would have their own isolated social networks, political and religious beliefs and so on - but would be used to encountering people who are very different.
Thantrax Thantrax's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I see children being less supervised than ever before. They'll likely be free to run around and go where they want since surveillance systems mean greater safety against random threats. For entertainment and education, their muse is always at their side to help them out. Even purchasing toys could be handled by providing the child's muse some instructions on what is and isn't allowed, as well as a basic budget or allotment. For education in particular, I could easily see taking a page from The Diamond Age, by Neal Stephenson. For those who haven't read it , the book features a book called the Young Lady's Illustrated Primer. The book bonds itself with a girl and then interacts with her, customizing it to her interests. It draws upon recurring myths in human cultures the world over and uses their building blocks to construct a mythology directed at the child with the intention of educating them about the world around them and how it works. A muse could easily fill this same role and I would imagine it would be a great 'poor man's' way of educating children. With nostalgia being such a popular facet though, I would imagine those who are well off would still prefer a live teacher being available to their children in order to guide their learning. For me, looking at the Lunar-Lagrange Alliance brings to mind the idea of a nice 'family town'. I imagine a number of the older, more well of families amongst the LLA getting together and buying homes on a habitat built expressly to cater to families and family values. Couples looking to raise their children move in and are encouraged to become actively social in the community, visiting neighbors and signing on to the local social networks. Through out the day, parents send their children off to spend the day in the care of their teacher. Children are grouped together in bunches of 5 to 8 and spend the whole day together under the directed learning of their teacher. He or she might take them to the park where there are animals kept, or brought to classrooms with the appropriate tools on hand for dabbling in science. Parents use the time to work their jobs through telepresence while the children are gone and pack it in when they come home. From there, families are encouraged to mingle by perhaps gathering for some communal AR games or watching some vids. Local restaurants and hangouts are all built to accommodate play places for the children so the adults can socialize while the kids run about. During the Fall, habitats like these likely grew quite upset at having to pack in extra people fleeing Earth and only now are starting to breathe easy again after the refugees have moved on.
Quincey Forder Quincey Forder's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
The way I see it is that children are conceived collectively, so to speak. And the authority of the habitat/city determines which couple will raise the child. That doesn't mean that there are old school reproduction and lovechildren on the scumbarges my ruling is that children are raised collectively, as a clan. Children might or might not know who their biological parents are, but they are raised all together.
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sjmcc13 sjmcc13's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Quincey Forder wrote:
on the scumbarges my ruling is that children are raised collectively, as a clan. Children might or might not know who their biological parents are, but they are raised all together.
Have you read "The Republic"? This sounds a bit like Plato to me.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
The idea of decentralized parenting is certainly an interesting one, especially given the vast number of communal habitats. It speaks to humanity's ancestry, as well as those of other species in the transhuman family, and the idea of communal raising strikes me as a quintessential feature of life in some habitats. Not only does it alleviate the burdens on parents to constantly care for their children, it creates a far greater community spirit; everyone grew up together and knows each other. It's amusing to think of a pair of uplift orangutans gently chastising misbehaving children on a visit to the zoo, before handing them off to a transhuman with feathers instead of hair, their neo-avian spouse, and a more normal transhuman woman. I also love the idea of children and their muses being lifelong friends. Greater independence is also an interesting thought, since stranger danger, while not likely a non-issue, is a significantly lessened one. Children's muses could be programmed by parents to limit certain behaviours, and report others to the parent if performed, but they'd otherwise be every kid's best friend. It'd be a very interesting thing to think of a child in a Lunar habitat, wandering and exploring the forests on their own with their digital companion, who assumes a friendly but clearly non-human form, in their AR overlay. They play games together, they laugh, they joke, and the muse even balances priorities when a big alarm clock announces it's time to go home, deciding just how long they can acceptably play hookie, communicating with the parent while still sympathizing with their child companion. It'd be Calvin and Hobbes: Transhuman edition. Something that I have to mention, though, is something that I got into a discussion with people the other day over, and that's education styles: Transhuman children grow up with all the information they could ever want at their fingertips. How does that effect education? Is it far more hands-on, focusing on things like developing skills (critical thinking, creativity, etc.), or is formal education about processing the facts into memory as it is now?
Quincey Forder Quincey Forder's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Well to be honnest, the idea of decentralized parenthood was inspired by Gargoyles episodes Avalon part 2, Monster and Sanctuary, where we discover that the main male character has a teenage daughter. Elisa, the main female character, ask him about the daughter's parents, and Goliath, the male character, tells her that hatchling are the children of the whole clan. Another big inspiration are the Quarran in Mass Effect. I posted an idea for a tradition inspired by them about a year ago
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Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
With muses and the mesh, I think it's well beyond decentralized/'village' parenting. It's post-parenting.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I disagree. Children are still children, even if the technology we have to raise them is greatly different; you don't just sit them down in a growth accelerator and time-enhanced simuspace and hope for the best. That got tried once and the Lost were the result. Even kids with Medichines still need a kiss on the cheek and a hug when they scrape their knee. There's plenty of examples throughout history of communities raising children together. This is the norm for much of the social animals and it was for humans too before the break-up of very large extended families in the modern world; that support structure was integral to human child-rearing efforts before the modern age. Even if children can get information off the mesh and be given corrective guidance by muses, that's no substitute for a parent making decisions to guide them and being there for them when they're in trouble. It's a substansive part of the human condition.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Double post. No clue why there isn't a comment delete button...
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I completely disagree, Axel. Meshed muses and medichines are *exactly* what removes the need for parent/village. Even if you posit a physical need for bodily contact, that doesn't mean a mommy. This is the post-human future.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Just because children get told off when they're bad and care when they're injured doesn't eliminate the need for a parent. Parents offer children guidance, comfort, counsel, reassurance, and more. Humans have an innate need to bond at a young age with a parental figure, and emotional warmth is a necessary part of life that muses simply cannot provide (remember that a muse is not fully self-aware; they can have personality quirks but they're still not self-aware). Until/unless the human species is modified to the point of being unrecognizable, we'll still need parental care for children.
CodeBreaker CodeBreaker's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
That, and there is impetus from the other side of the equation as well. Sure, some of the more tedious aspects of child rearing might be marginalized by the introduction of mature techniques such a muse assistance and genetic tinkering, but parents will still be rearing their own children simply because they want to. It is the same argument that I use against people using hyper accelerated time when raising a child. Most people do not have children so they have an adult mini-me. They do so for the experience of guiding the kid through early life, and that is not something that is likely to change any time soon (especially with the Futura disaster so clear in everyones memories.) In fact I would say that the introduction of a post-requirement-scarcity economy will only enforce this further. There are very few reasons to have a child, other than for the sake of raising one.
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Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
That argues against the village model, then. Either parents are having kids specifically to raise them, or societies are having kids to have more adults (very inefficiently). … Or maybe a sort of human version of the 'puppy rental' stores, hmm. I'm not saying 21st-century parenting *can't* exist, I'm saying that it *needn't*. I don't think the Lost is a valid data point, because there are simply too many factors in there (acceleration, breeding, soldiers, and let's not forget PSI). I am rejecting, though, the idea that "guidance, comfort, counsel, reassurance, […] [bonding], and emotional warmth" can't be replicated in any other way.
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
"21st century parenting" is a wide category. Saying that the village model is unlikely is also displaying a lack of understanding over how immensely draining parenting can be; kids are exhausting. Throughout most of human history (it would be fair to say all, since it's still common in a lot of areas), child-rearing is a very much communal and family-driven effort. In places where people still live in tribal villages, it's a large part of daily life. I'm not saying EVERYONE follows this model either, mind you. I'm sure some people take the current route a lot of parents do and push their kids into the hands of daycares and nannies, either out of choice or lack of time. However, on Luna, Scum barges, and anarchist/autonomist habs, this is probably very common. It also likely appears on Titan and maybe the Jovians, but probably to a lesser extent. And, for the record, you're welcome to suggest alternatives that people might take, but it begs the question as to why they would take it. People don't do things for no reason.
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
21st-century Western parenting, whatever. :) You described something roughly 'nuclear family', so that's what I was discussing. You misunderstand. I didn't say that 'village' or 'nuclear' parenting wouldn't exist. I said that post-parenting certainly *could*, and that the argument of 'parents do it on purpose' was anti-village. I'm glad you've now said that post-parenting isn't impossible. :) So we agree. I hardly think I need to supply a reason for the obvious and natural extension of high-tech parenting practices, which you yourself already supplied. You cut a very wide swath with your suggested locations, and I also think it's very logical for the family as a cohesive unit to break down significantly in a post-scarcity, post-mortality future. Except for the hypergods, of course. 3Jane 4 Eva!
Axel the Chimeric Axel the Chimeric's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
You'll have to spell out post-parenting, really. If by that you mean that children are a lot more free-roaming than they once were, I'm certain that's true for some (see my Transhuman Calvin and Hobbes example). Otherwise, you'll have to be more specific. I don't disagree that the nuclear family is likely non-existent, except for Uplifts; people are too mobile to stick that way for long. Plus, it's annoying for a teenager to explain to her parents that she doesn't care what they think of her new skin pattern, or her uplift octopus boyfriend, they both make her happy. This is not an argument against village parenting, though, but rather one in its favour. Without a family support network, especially in resource-tight habs or in areas with strong community focuses (like Scum barges), raising children is a fair bit more difficult; parents are stuck doing all the work themselves, and that is a lot of work indeed. Hence, it strikes me as entirely reasonable for the people in this environment to form social groups to share the burden.
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
It's just a general term meaning that parents don't really exist. I imagine that they're not needed, between mesh and muse, in a world of nanofabs. There are certainly many places this wouldn't function, of course. For example, it's probably a configuration for places where resources aren't a problem. I don't see how permanently 'rebellious' teens is an argument for village parenting, unless you mean that peer-groups are the village? Besides, a little pyschosurgery should handle that rebellion. :D I'm just speculating that, if economic sponsorship isn't required, if genetic continuance isn't important, if inculturation is handled by ever-present imaginary friends… :) It certainly depends on the locality.
Thantrax Thantrax's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
On the subject of the Lost, I would suspect that the techniques cited might still work, but public backlash against using their philosophy as a whole would experience severe public backlash. The people as a whole didn't just say aw shucks, the program didn't work. They were horrified and Cognite is still smarting PR-wise from the affair. It's not that the individual components are necessarily flawed in any way, it's that the public fear them. Yerameyahu, your ideas of post-parenting interest me and I'd like to hear more about them. If the child no longer has a parent designated, where does the child live? Does anyone monitor the child's progress on education? Do the children have a designated person to turn to if they encounter a problem, or are they expected to turn to the same authorities as the adults? For example, if a bully pushes them around, are they to deal with it themselves or take it to station security? Since I went Lunar Conservative with the last sample I did, let me take a stab now at a more Titanian example. Perhaps with the Titanian Commonwealth, each child is deemed a ward of the State by default. Parents who gave birth to them may apply for access to the child to act in the role of a mother or father. Due to the transitory relationship of people in this neck of space, only one parent is typically awarded guardianship. The parent must pass a basic psychological exam and prove that their living space and lifestyle is no clear and present threat to the child. If the Titanian officials approve the application, the child is surrendered to that parent to be raised. Until the child reaches the age of 18, subjective time based upon the child's perspective, their parents make decisions on their behalf much like a guardian would today. Traditionally, once they are old enough, the child begins to accompany the parent throughout the whole day so as to learn how the parent lives. Parents talk their children through the tasks of habitat maintenance, rocket piloting, AR design, or whatever other profession they practice. As well, the child gets a direct chance to observe how their parent acts and reacts to social situations. At about age 13, the child is then sent with other adults that the parent trusts to experience life amongst a wide variety of professions and lifestyles and give the child a chance to learn what appeals to them. If the child remains a ward of the state, they instead accompany volunteers that sign up for the task in exchange for Titanian Kroner. Once the child becomes 18, they are then free of guardianship, either by state or parent, and are allotted a sum of Kroner to begin their new life as full adults of the Commonwealth.
Wyldknight Wyldknight's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I'm curious as to why you think that replaces parents. Who teaches the kids right from wrong? Technically the Muse could but why should the child care what the muse says, it can't even punish them. Or how about where the child comes in the first place? Are you saying two people have a kid and then release them into the world hoping the muse can do their job? If I was a parent investing resources into the creation of a legacy I would not leave his/her development to an AI. Not only is that risky it also shows a complete lack of concern by the parent. Why put all the time and money into the creation of this person and then have nothing to do with their upbringing? What sense does that make? What do they gain?
C-rep +1
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Mammalian children are generally dependent on their parents not just for food and protection, but for emotional and social bootstrapping. Rat pups and monkeys lacking in skin/fur contact with their mother develop a lifelong high stress level and become generally neophobic: anything new and unexpected is experienced as bad. The same is likely true with human children, although controlled randomized trials have not been done. Even more important are the various critical periods when the infant picks up social cues and especially language - if they don't get the right stimuli during this period they fail at learning them more or less permanently. So while technically you could just manufacture children and have their muses and habitat systems keep them fed and safe, that is a recipe for feral children. Think of the Lost, but without the education and psi, just stunted social and emotional growth. Having a community adopt children works, provided they get chance to intimate bonding with enough people. However, this requires the community to have the right culture to share responsibilities properly. Family ties usually provide these obligations. The old mammalian parental bonding system is a pretty efficient way of ensuring that adults will care for children despite their messiness, and vice versa making the children dependent on emotional feedback that also makes them want to learn from their parents. It can perhaps be extended through the judicious use of social enhancement drugs, especially when you want to enlarge the 'circle of concern' to a group or ensure that assigned parents feel for their kid. Of course, if you think this is messy and inefficient you could try hacking those pesky mammalian brains. Why keep those bonding systems anyway, if they can interact as equals on a credit or reputation market, produce offspring by design and seek out fellow minds that are interesting or useful to them? OK, the resulting child would be sociopathic, but that is not necessarily bad if combined with enough intelligence and self-control, and some training in how the majority mammals see things. You would need to revamp the emotional system a bit too, to get around that excessive need for intimacy and tendency to stress up about social status - in fact, let's rewire those to useful thinks like learning skills and improving quantifiable assets useful for survival and goal-fulfilment. This way they will consistently keep their eyes on the ball of personal enhancement. I can totally see some hardcore extropians thinking this is a good idea, not understanding at all why everybody else are appalled or calling the result exhuman. Homo economicus, here we come!
Extropian
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Constant sousveillance, everpresent muses and community oversight doesn't sound like 'less oversight'. I imagine, if anything, children will be watched MORE. There's no shortage of dangers on a ship or a habitat. As Arenamounsouanst pointed out, mammals (and birds) need bonding with a limited circle of family. AGIs likely benefit from constant, directed supervision and socialization in their initial growth phases. All that leaves are octopus uplifts, and they could probably benefit from some directed socialization as well. The other question isn't 'what is best for the children', but 'what are parents going to do?' Accidental pregnancy is basically unheard of. Parents likely pay thousands or tens of thousands of credits out of pocket just for the initial conception (to get reproductive rights to their morph, rent an exowomb, buy habitat space, etc.) These aren't the sort of people likely to say 'frak it, they'll raise themselves'. Plus it ignores the tremendous amount of psychological damage people are still working off. That sort of thing tends to breed clinginess in people who would go and make more people. Sure there would be more communal parenting. The rep system tells us it's all about the community now. But that isn't a replacement for those 1-? people who are the actual parents. If anything, I imagine that EP parents are more observant, more controlling, more worried than those of the modern day. It's easy to imagine a child running free in Auntie Em's algae farm, but think of how many cameras are tracking, and what happens when they get too close to where Cousin Chris is - the guy who enjoys pedo guro porn (or how your mesh interactions are controlled in a world were adverts for ANYTHING are pumped constantly at everyone).
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I'm not saying that children are raised in isolation. They will certainly have peers and other people to interact with at all stages. I'm saying that it's fully possible for them not to have a nuclear family or parents (argument #1), and that this doesn't *also* mean that the village model is necessary (argument #2). I want to reiterate that both of those models are of course possible. The basic problem of this thread is that we're talking about many (good) ideas at once. Everything depends on the specific combination of local conditions, which is only reasonable. The problem is that we're each assuming specific sets of conditions that fit whatever we happen to be talking about. :) To various people: I think you're really underestimating the ability of an omnipresent voice in your head with access to the mesh/comms to teach anything, including right from wrong. I think you're underestimating the ability of the mesh (with VR, remember) and intentional non-'family' socializing to support meaningful social relationships. I further think you're *over*-estimating the resource investment of reproduction. Again, there are certainly communities in which these conditions are *not* a good fit. Certainly there are places that are extra-dangerous, or where conception indeed costs thousands and must be personally intentional, or where resources are limited so that a child needs economic sponsorship. And so on. Those exceptions don't make this model impossible. It really feels like there's a lot of emotional (meaning irrational), 21st-century 'conservatism' about this, though.
Thantrax Thantrax's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I don't feel like more sousveillance would necessarily translate into more nosy parents. With those options available, the parents don't necessarily make use of them. They might flip through a few bits of data, but they likely have other things to do. I can certainly see some parents making sure to watch a time lapse replay if their children's day, but I see that more as the exception than the rule. They could have the child's muse flag anything the parents need to see. Why watch video of your kid when you could spend some time with them? Anyone have constructive criticism on the Lunar or Titanian models I presented? Who wants to take their turn with kids growing up in Valles-New Shanghai?
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Yerameyahu wrote:
To various people: I think you're really underestimating the ability of an omnipresent voice in your head with access to the mesh/comms to teach anything, including right from wrong. I think you're underestimating the ability of the mesh (with VR, remember) and intentional non-'family' socializing to support meaningful social relationships. I further think you're *over*-estimating the resource investment of reproduction.
1) The omniscient voice in your head isn't the one that actually creates the children. No discussion about how children are raised would be complete without identifying where the children come from in the first place - i.e., someone conceives, engineers or adopts them, through a good deal of personal labor. If we accept that, we have to ask 'what is a person who is going to go out of their way to do this likely to do with said child?' I don't see that discussed at all in your arguments. 2) 'Omniscient voice in head' lacks the tactile data necessary for proper growth, as aremantouneoeru showed. Hence, having, if not a family, at least regular people regularly to physically nurture, is a requirement.
Quote:
I don't feel like more sousveillance would necessarily translate into more nosy parents. With those options available, the parents don't necessarily make use of them.
I would tend to consider automated filters and logs 'nosey', even if they aren't directly monitored by the parent - and which parent would not put these basic controls in place? The only reason most parents aren't more nosey with their kids now is the cost involved in following them around. That no longer applies - you have the muse do it for you.
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
You're right: I'm not dealing with the infant stage at all, and I've only commented on the reproduction itself in passing. So? :) I haven't been suggesting a solitary existence, either. Physical interaction is not precluded by my descriptions. That's distinct from a family, and I think it's also distinct from the village model, which (I think) entails a intentional responsibility on the part of a fairly small group of community members. I guess you could call it a 'mega-village' or 'village of strangers', but I don't think those are helpful.
Quincey Forder Quincey Forder's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
For my own setting (and maybe issue #3 of The Eye) I'm developing the Bureau of Youth Promotion for the Planetary Consortium that is managing the population's reproduction They're in charge of the artificial wombs and which family is given custody of which baby. Think of it like a between New Olympus' bioroids factory in Appleseed and how things are done in Toward Terra (an anime I've referred to several times in the past year) Children are "born" in Splicer body and aren't allowed to resleeve until 16, barring accident. That way, there is new Ego introduced in the flow AND provide cheaper, second-hand morph for contractures to wear. I think flats and splicers, and maybe Exalt are fertile by default. Other morphs are sterile unless given a "genetic plug-in" that cost as much as the morph itself and cover the treatment bill plus trademark and copyright reproduction license
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nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Yerameyahu wrote:
You're right: I'm not dealing with the infant stage at all, and I've only commented on the reproduction itself in passing. So? :)
Because it's very difficult to discuss something without talking about how it got there. You might as well say flowers would naturally grow high in the air, where they'll get more sunlight. Alright, that's true, but how did they get there in the first place?
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Aha! I made that exact point at the beginning of this thread, and you've fallen for my clever ruse. Admit it, you didn't bother reading the thread. :) Seriously though, I agree. I did address the suggested scenarios of 'love child' and 'group child' (including 'citizen factory') earlier, but the thread headed in a different direction. I do think, though, that there's the potential for substantial disconnect between infancy and childhood in the setting; a 'love child' could still be raised in a 'ultra free-range child' method, effectively parent-less. Yes, it does seem pretty weird, but that's not the same as 'can't work'. 'Can't work' is the specific argument I've been opposing, not 'seems unlikely'.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Quincey Forder wrote:
I think flats and splicers, and maybe Exalt are fertile by default. Other morphs are sterile unless given a "genetic plug-in" that cost as much as the morph itself and cover the treatment bill plus trademark and copyright reproduction license
I would disagree. Most of the morphs produced in the outer system are probably fertile by default, or at least take minimal modification to be fertile. This is especially true for those groups that utilize copyleft law... it might be illegal in some parts of the outer system for a morph broker to inhibit the reproductive features of a morph without consent of the user.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I can't remember what I did this morning, muchless what you posted a week ago!! I do definitely agree, it can and probably does happen. I have no issue with a character concept like that. It just probably isn't the "average" (not that there IS an average in EP!)
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
You would have the consent of the user. You signed the EULA.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Yerameyahu wrote:
You would have the consent of the user. You signed the EULA.
EULAs probably won't work for morphs, at least not in the outer systems. The problem being that EULAs presume that the object is not the explicit property of the purchaser, and they are merely licensors. You might see this sort of thing occur in the inner system, but the anarchists groups and the Titanian Commonwealth won't let that crap fly.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I was speaking more metaphorically, anyway. :) You're selling a product, and someone is agreeing to buy it. If it can't reproduce, they're still agreeing to that. The only things that could alter that are massive consumer rejection of such products (boycotts), or government regulation (not very @-rep-y). My point was that it's *not* without the user's consent at all.
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Yerameyahu wrote:
I was speaking more metaphorically, anyway. :) You're selling a product, and someone is agreeing to buy it. If it can't reproduce, they're still agreeing to that. The only things that could alter that are massive consumer rejection of such products (boycotts), or government regulation (not very @-rep-y). My point was that it's *not* without the user's consent at all.
That depends on whether it's an advertised feature. The first time a morph shows signs of infertility, outer system laws might require immediate rectification. On the other hand, it's very likely that most outer system morphs are open-sourced, with all genetic flaws readable by any people who wish to inquire on the features of the morph. Hypercorps that don't dig the open source movement probably don't deal morphs out there.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
Yerameyahu Yerameyahu's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
I agree, on both counts. I just couldn't let the blanket idea that something wasn't possible go by. :)
Decivre Decivre's picture
Re: Children in A.F. 10
Yerameyahu wrote:
I agree, on both counts. I just couldn't let the blanket idea that something wasn't possible go by. :)
I never said it wasn't possible. Nearly anything is possible in the world of EP. I said it was probably illegal. Even the hypercorps likely care about abiding by the law... at least openly.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]