Re-reading the core book again, and on page 46 I read a passage that probably unsettled me more than the most terrifying exsurgent.
Well that's just outright depressing. I don't buy into the bollocks that transhuman immortality is a "wonder" if that means that relationships have no meaning if they simply end up burning out. Hey want to be buddies? Fuck you, I'm gonna get bored of your company in like four hundred years. How about marriage and having kids? Have kids? What are you, [i]Jovian[/i]? Exactly how do transhumans expect to remain sane over the next five hundred years? The next hundred thousand years? In billions of years, right down to the last quantum moment of the universe? The title of this whole setting, "eclipse phase", takes on a new meaning for me, I think. It's less about the exsurgent virus and more about how transhumanity's currently in a phase of conveniently ignoring just how mentally unprepared they are as a species for this whole immortality shtick, which by itself is an outright lie if you consider backups to be mere forks, [i]copies[/i] of people and [i]not[/i] a direct continuation of them. After a certain period, after this [i]phase[/i], even the scum might be thinking "yep, 312th year and I'm still partying. Weee wooo here comes the party train of...yeah". Do people in the setting just think extremely short term and just mentally block themselves if they start to think about where they're going to be in 1,000 years? More people are now planning for a very long future. For most people these schemes are very minimal, but they often include an [b]awareness that few, if any, relationships are likely to last an entire lifetime.[/b] However, functional immortality is only one of the many wonders of the modern world.
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"Don't believe everything you read on the Internet.”
-Abraham Lincoln, State of the Union address