T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
375.1 | Swat! | HOMBRE::CONLIFFE | | Thu Aug 21 1986 13:57 | 7 |
| There's been some discussion already in the MOVIES notesfile
down on SSDEVO -- I forget the note number but its close to the
end!
Nigel
Press KP7 (or SELECT) etc etc etc
|
375.2 | SEE MOVIES | EDEN::KLAES | Avoid a granfalloon. | Thu Aug 21 1986 13:57 | 7 |
| See BISON::MOVIES Note 460 for some comments on THE FLY.
Though SF Notes might be a good place to discuss the
practicality/impracticality of Brundle's teletransporter.
Larry
|
375.3 | Loss of personal identity. | ANT::SMCAFEE | Steve McAfee | Thu Aug 28 1986 13:39 | 22 |
| *** Possible Spoiler ***
One problem I have always had with the numerous instantaneous/
semi-instantaneous teleportation devices is the loss of personal
identity. In THE FLY Brundle actually comments that the contents
of Telepod One are disintegrated and then re-integrated in Telepod
Two. I'm not sure I would feel secure that the re-integrated person
was me. If anyone has ever taken an introductory course in Philosophy
then you probably discussed personal identity. I wouldn't be satisfied
to know that an identical duplicate of me is going to be re-integrated
at the other end. After all disintegration might be very painful.
No one could ever know for sure...
Also why couldn't we have the computer running the Telepod/Transporter
send a copy of me to more than one place! Think about it...
This applies to Star Trek's transporters, Brundle's Telepod, and
many other stories I am sure.
Any other comments?
Steve McAfee
|
375.4 | RE 375.3 | EDEN::KLAES | Avoid a granfalloon. | Thu Aug 28 1986 14:20 | 10 |
| Steve, you might really be interested in checking out Star Trek
Notes 3, 87, and 93 discussing the transporter. THEBAY::STAR_TREK
This is just a helpful hint, NOT a message saying take your
questions elsewhere. Perhaps those SF Noters who do NOT check out
ST (is that possible?!) could come up with some concepts on the
transporter in both ST and THE FLY.
Larry
|
375.5 | $ SET TOPIC = OFF | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Thu Aug 28 1986 15:00 | 12 |
| re .3:
Actually, I hope you would check out note 87 in Star_Trek.
I started the note expressing the same misgivings as you, and boy
am I taking a beating! I could use some help.
/
( ___
) ///
/
$ SET TOPIC = ON
|
375.6 | Speculations | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Thu Aug 28 1986 15:03 | 41 |
| Re .3
Larry Niven wrote an excellent essay entitled "Theory and Practice
of Teleportation" in which he addresses this and many other amusing
conundrums of teleportation.
I can think of a couple of reasons for NOT being worried, one based
on dualism, one based on physicalism.
Suppose, dualistically, that you have a mind, ego, soul, or spirit
that is not part of your material body. Now, your soul obviously
has no difficulty keeping track of your body as it moves about,
shedding bits of matter and taking on new ones. It is at least
plausible that the soul would not have any more difficulty keeping
track of its body through disintegration and reintegration.
Suppose, physicalistically, that your material body is all there
is to you. Once more, we have no trouble believing that identity
is maintained despite bits of matter coming and going. Now, in
the case of this kind of teleportation, ALL the matter gets changed
at once, but the pattern is completely unaltered, in theory. Since
the particular bits of matter don't matter, the perfect duplication
of pattern should be enough for continued identity. At least I
don't see anything to stand in its way.
Now, about duplication -- If pattern is all there is to identity,
then both copies are equally the person. So, for instance, if X
commits a crime and then gets duplicated, I think both copies of
X should be punished. It gets trickier with property: I suppose
X1 and X2 would have to split it between them. And marriage?! Augh!
Instant polygamy.
Duplication on a dualist model might not be possible. It would
depend on the nature of the soul. You might get a viable version
and a soulless version. An idiot? A psychopath? A catatonic? Or
maybe it would suck a soul in from wherever souls come from. It
might be someone else, with physical identity and maybe identical
memories, who has a markedly different character and no feeling
of identity with or responsibility for actions prior to the duplication.
Earl Wajenberg
|
375.7 | None, one or many - that is the question! | DSSDEV::WALSH | Chris Walsh | Thu Aug 28 1986 17:28 | 20 |
| Interesting.
However, I must take exception to the bit about punishing both people in the
case that one of the duplicates commits a crime. It all depends upon the
characteristics of the soul.
If both duplicates have different souls, or none, then you should logically
only punish the duplicate that did wrong. I assume you believe that
differences in experiences create different people? After all, one
duplicate's memories will recall being there, and then suddenly being here,
while the other duplicate will recall being there, and ending up somewhere
different... While that's only a minor difference, sooner or later you would
have two different people.
Of course, since we're off the deep end already, suppose that a soul can open
"channels" to multiple "devices". A soul-server, if you will... In that case,
punishing one of the duplicates should be sufficient. You wouldn't even care
which duplicate took the punishment - it's all the same "person"!
- Chris
|
375.8 | fire photon torpedoes | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Thu Aug 28 1986 17:32 | 24 |
| re .6:
> Now, in
> the case of this kind of teleportation, ALL the matter gets changed
> at once, but the pattern is completely unaltered, in theory. Since
> the particular bits of matter don't matter, the perfect duplication
> of pattern should be enough for continued identity. At least I
> don't see anything to stand in its way.
The thing I see that might stand in the way is that moment of
total non-existance between the disintigration and the re-integration.
You can't really call it a "continued" identity because of that
DIS-continuity. All you've done is created a new identity after
destroying the original.
No, I don't think the physicalist argument can be used to ensure
the continuity of the self.
/
( ___
) ///
/
P.S. This is great :-( I get to argue the the same point in two
files now.
|
375.9 | Slight retraction | DSSDEV::WALSH | Chris Walsh | Thu Aug 28 1986 17:32 | 7 |
| Oops. I read your first essay too fast, I guess, Earl. I'd have to agree, in
the case that the crime was committed before the duplication, both duplicates
should pay. Again, though, if you can only catch one of them, that may
be enough, depending upon how many "people" there actually are in those
bodies...
- Chris
|
375.10 | Further Speculation and Two Pointers | INK::KALLIS | | Thu Aug 28 1986 17:34 | 24 |
| re .3, .6:
There was an excellent story appearing in _Startling Stories_ in
the late 1950s confronting just such a problem. A couple was going
to honeymoon on the moon, where they were going by teleportation,
and the signal was lost; a backup/duplicate signal was sent, so
that one spouse was the "original" and the other a "duplicate."
Were they married? What was their actual relationship, etc.?
Good, moody story. The author "solved" the problem by having the
"original" also replaced by a "duplicate" in a subsequent
teleportation. Not a good ending (a cop-out, in fact) but the
story didn't suffer too much by that.
The same problem is masticated almost to death in _Rogue Moon_ by
Budrys, where there was more than one "duplicate."
On the soul business: there's yet a third alternative: the soul
is released at the moment of disintegration but cannot get backk
into the body because of the relatively instantaneous nature of
the disintegration/transport. Then there'd be a soulless _something_
at the destination and a loose soul ...
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
375.11 | Here, Helix! | DSSDEV::WALSH | Chris Walsh | Thu Aug 28 1986 17:38 | 3 |
| re .10
In which case, I hope there's a bottle and a cat handy! ;-)
|
375.12 | Conti Nuity | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Thu Aug 28 1986 17:46 | 29 |
| Re .7 & .9
Notice that I advocated punishing both copies only if the crime
was (a) committed before duplication, as you noticed, and (b) if
identity of physical pattern is all that matters. If we have
immaterial souls in the picture, I agree that things may be different.
Awkward, too, if there is no good way to tell which body, if either,
got the original soul. Meta-awkward if everyone concerned is not
agreed about the existence of non-physical souls.
Re .8
I grant that the physical discontinuity is strange, but I'm not
sure it is grounds for denying identity. Why don't we start by
asking how we establish identity in the first place? For an inanimate
object, physical continuity may be necessary. But a mind in an
organic body is a very different system. As I remarked before,
the particular pieces of matter in it keep changing anyway, like
the air in a sound or the water in a wave. Also, the mental activity,
if not the physical persistence, is not continuous.
We accept persistence of identity despite the gaps of sleep, or
the worse gaps of coma. You would probably accept persistence of
identity if the person were frozen, so that there was no biological
activity at all, much less mentation, then revived.
This is a great thought-experiment, if nothing else.
Earl Wajenberg
|
375.13 | this IS a great thought experiment | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Thu Aug 28 1986 18:09 | 23 |
| re .12:
yes, but I speak not only of the physical discontinuity but also
the discontinuity of the process, wave, whatever.
In every other example, there is some sort of continuity, in
teleportation, there is none at all.
- Sleep is not a discontinuity at all, sleep and dreams are a vital
part of the functioning of the brain.
(remember, we're talking purely physicalist)
- Coma, well at least the body is still there, and the brain is
generating some sort of busy signal.
- Frozen, again, at least the body is still there, and I might
argue about the revivability of someone who is frozen to the
point of zero brain activity.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
375.14 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Aug 28 1986 18:14 | 8 |
| Re .13:
The discontinuity is only something we see; if the body is recreated in
the same configuration it was in when it was taken apart, there is no
discontinuity in its operation.
-- edp
|
375.15 | ! | INK::KALLIS | | Fri Aug 29 1986 09:56 | 25 |
| re .12, .14:
Let's argue this strictly from the "materialist" viewpoint, for
a second (leave souls, etc., out of it):
We take a body, dematerialize it, and somehow recreate it exactly
the same, twice [it could be n times, but let's not throw too many
curves). So now we have two of what we had one of before. Now
a team, of people comes in and leads one of him or her out the South
door of the room and puts him or her on a bus. The other is led
out of the North end of the room and is put in a taxi to the airport.
No matter what happens next, the two "persons" are having different
experiences, which lead to differences in them. They will interact
with different people, do different things, etc., before they meet
again.
Which is the "original?" One? Both? Neither?
Now that's a good thought experiment.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
P.S.: The nonmaterialist answer is easier: whichever (if either)
has the soul. The problem here is detecting the soul. :-0
|
375.16 | Turn in my ticket, I'm not going | OLIVER::OSBORNE | Blade Walker | Fri Aug 29 1986 13:59 | 46 |
| re: .14
> The discontinuity is only something we see; if the body is recreated in
> the same configuration it was in when it was taken apart, there is no
> discontinuity in its operation.
Um, I'm not sure of this. My uninformed opinion is that the "self" is the
process, the operation of the brain. "Self-awareness", which is what I
recognize as "me", is a process- not the physical brain, though that's
where it takes place, and not some separate entity, a "soul".
The method of saving this process would be astonishingly subtle- it would
not be satisfactory to save the physical atoms, even in excruciating
detail. You would also have to save what each atom was doing- that is,
transferring an electrical charge, participating in a chemical reaction,
etc. Also, you would have to save all of it all at once- the transfer
from "running" to "saved" would have to occur faster than any of the
micro-processes could recognize that other micro-processes are "missing"
becaused they've been "saved". (I say "saved" to mean "put in a form
for transmission"- whether it's mailed in a box to Oskosh or sent by
hyperwave to the galactic core.)
Anything less subtle than that, and I suspect that it is equivalent to
disassembling a computer down to component transistors, while it's running,
reassembling it somewhere else, and assuming there will be no loss of
data.
One way to get around this might be to "trick" the process into moving
from where it is normally running (the brain) into the storage media.
This could be done by providing a "moving interface"- the brain and the
storage are interconnected at the boundery where the process has/hasn't
been moved, and the process moves over the boundery. This is something
like changing memory chips in a computer by substituting them during
the cpu cycles that aren't addressing that memory- remembering, of
course, to copy the contents of the memory from one to the other outside
of the cpu- so it doesn't know what's happening.
John Varley examines the social and psychological implications of this
kind of "mind transfer" in a number of stories, such as "Overdrawn at
the Memory Bank", "The Phantom of Kansas", and "The Ophiuchi Hotline".
For my money, some of the best stories dealing with this "who's got the
soul?" problem.
As for teleportation, L. Niven sums it up for me: "I don't know. I wouldn't
ride in the damn thing."
John O.
|
375.17 | Not me, thanks | IMBACQ::LYONS | | Sun Aug 31 1986 02:17 | 28 |
| Ok, let's take this discussion down to the basic level: How many
of you would be willing to be disintegrated so that an IDENTICAL
CLONE could be created some where else? I wouldn't trust the thing
even if they could capture all the elements, their position, velocity,
acceleration, etc., too much to hope they get all the noise out of
the signal. I'd rather stay living than save the time of traveling.
And if its too far to travel then I'll just stay home.
Another piece of the discussion revolves around the bit about
transmitting the original person. Multiple receivers could make
multiple copies but what if one of those receivers were not
`authorized'? Would the first receiver to reconstruct the person
produce the official version? I can picture a new crime - a
combination of wire taping and bodysnatching (anyone want to buy
their favorite movie star... cheep :-)
Or how about if the recording facilities were separate from the
transmission station... would the person exist during the delay
between obliteration and reconstruction? What if it were years or
centuries? Would you retain property rights? Obligations? At
what point in time did that status change?
About the soul bit, I like the way P.J. Farmer explained it in his
Riverworld series. The soul would be attracted to the (first?)
body that met its exacting requirements. This solves the issue
of duplicates but doesn't help with the bodysnatching bit.
Bob L.
|
375.18 | GOSUB THEBAY::STAR_TREK | ANT::SMCAFEE | Steve McAfee | Tue Sep 02 1986 14:04 | 7 |
|
FYI - Having started this identity business, I took someone's advice and
looked through note 87 of the THEBAY::STAR_TREK notes file. That
discussion contains over seventy notes on basically the same topic.
Steve McAfee
|
375.19 | Continuity | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Sep 02 1986 15:17 | 22 |
| Re .13
The gap between disintegration and reintegration cannot be totally
discontinuous, or there could be no reintegration. Minimally, the
pattern of the body, in some encoding or another, must continue.
Re .16 (or thereabouts)
Nice point about recording the state of motion of the particles,
but I doubt that it is necessary. Friction and Brownian motion
dominate activity at the molecular level in the human body, so all
your cells would come out alive and in the same relative positions.
By the way, with or without recording the state of motion, the total
amount of information necessary to specify a living thing is
astronomical. I doubt that the medium could be significantly smaller
than the "message" (=cargo). The space-warp and mass tunnel-effect
teleports have always seemed more plausible to me than the
dis/re-integrate models. Of course, they don't give rise to such
neat conundrums.
Earl Wajenberg
|
375.20 | AAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGHHHHHHH!!!!! | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Forever On Patrol | Wed Sep 03 1986 02:20 | 12 |
| re:.17
As Spock was supposed to have said at some point, "A difference
that makes no difference *is* no difference." In other words, if
the "identical clone" has all of the memories, feelings, etc. of
mine, and *is* (for all practical purposes) me in thought and
deed, then sure, no prob, I'd step into the teleporter.
Any other comments I have to make on this issue, I already made
in the STAR_TREK Conference topic.
--- jerry
|
375.21 | makes no difference to whom? | IMBACQ::LYONS | | Wed Sep 03 1986 12:22 | 14 |
| RE: .20
It may make no difference to the other people (if it walks like,
smells like, talks like, looks like...) but its only an identical
clone. The original person is gone, even if the `replacement'
is identical for everyone else the clone meets.
You can step into that teleporter but, I submit, it will be someone
else that looks and acts like you stepping out the other end.
(I follow enough notes files now... do I really have to add STAR_TREK
just to enter this discussion?)
Bob L.
|
375.22 | DIFFERENT BRICKS, DIFFERENT BUILDING? | EDEN::KLAES | Avoid a granfalloon. | Wed Sep 03 1986 12:49 | 6 |
| Our bodies undergo complete physical changes all the time -
we have ALL new cells since our births - does that make us any less
different than when we were born?
Larry
|
375.23 | ID Self-Checking | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed Sep 03 1986 13:02 | 22 |
| When you get up in the morning, how do you verify that you are the
same person who went to sleep the night before? In practical terms,
surely it is a matter of memory. You match your memory to the body
you can see and feel, what you see in the mirror, the way you now
think and feel compared to the way you used to think and feel.
Theoretically, none of that changes with the teleporter.
In a James Blish Star Trek novel, Scotty and Kirk give this argument
to McCoy (who hates the transporter) and suggest that he have Spock
give his subconscious memories a telepathic check before and after
transportation, if it really worries him. McCoy replies that that
would be a satisfactory test if he weren't really worried about
souls, which he doesn't know how to test for.
(The novel was "Spock Must Die" and was so-so in quality. The Spock
who must die is a duplicate produced by the transporter, but a perfect
mirror image of the original. With a lot of hand-waving, Blish
asserts that the mirror image would have a personality of opposite
orientation, i.e. Evil. Given this hokey premise, he works it out
fairly well.)
Earl Wajenberg
|
375.24 | how do you know you are you :-) | IMBACQ::LYONS | | Wed Sep 03 1986 14:42 | 15 |
| The resulting clone would have all the memories and could even
think of him/her/its self as the real person. No problem there.
As a matter of fact, the clone can't even tell that the whole
universe hasn't shifted under then and that they wweren't the
one to stay in the same place.
So the victim can't tell the difference and the people around them
can't tell the difference and the original can't tell the difference
(cause they don't exist anymore)... right?
What it takes is an external observer to point to the cloud of
dust from the exhaust fans on the transmitter to say `there goes
Earl the first'... ;-)
Bob L.
|
375.25 | How do you know it's me? | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Wed Sep 03 1986 14:57 | 17 |
| But what if the original is NOT destroyed in the process?
Do you suddenly start to see out of two pair of eyes?
I don't think so.
I think that "my" consciousness would stay in this body, and a new one
is created in the duplicate body.
Now destroy the original.
Now open both boxes, the transmitter is empty, and I' (I prime)
steps out of the receiver.
There is no test you can perform (including psychic) that will be
able to say that I' is not the I you knew before the process.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
375.26 | a house is not a home | IMBACQ::LYONS | | Wed Sep 03 1986 15:27 | 25 |
| RE: .22
I'm not convinced that all of a person's components are replaced
regularly (teeth, bones, etc.) but, in either case, the package is
not the whole person. I am specifically thinking of the life-
force/energy-field/whatever that surrounds each living being.
With the body removed, the energy dissipates. At the other end
you are only re-creating the package. Exit one android. (;->)
Also, how can you say you aren't different than when you were born...
I sure am. :-)
RE: .25
Ok, then I'll try it (but I'll not be the first). If there is such
a thing as global consciousness (and you can prove it) you may have
a market for this contraption. But the real problem is IF the same
consciousness can be in two places at once.
> There is no test you can perform (including psychic) that will be
> able to say that I' is not the I you knew before the process.
Yes, but did the original Die?
Bob L.
|
375.27 | the Shadow Knows... | INK::KALLIS | | Wed Sep 03 1986 15:31 | 10 |
| re .25:
When you added "(including psychic)" you opened a can of worms.
It goes back to the soul question. If there is a soul and it is
detectable by psychic means and it doesn't transfer in the transporter,
then there would be a legitimate way of testing the "original" from
one or more copies: check to see whether it contains a soul.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
375.28 | SOULS EXTEND FROM BEYOND OUR REALITY | EDEN::KLAES | Avoid a granfalloon. | Wed Sep 03 1986 18:19 | 12 |
| If there is NO soul, then obviously the problem of what happens
to a human's soul in the transporting process no longer exists.
If there IS a soul, in the sense of a soul which is supernatural
(eminating from another dimension of reality), then anything which
happens in this reality would not affect the soul, as it resides
in another dimension. One could imagine the soul "skipping" the
transporter process, to return to the body when the transporting
is done and the body is reconstructed.
Larry
|
375.29 | How Can You Be in Two Places At Once When You're Not Anywhere A | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Wed Sep 03 1986 23:18 | 42 |
| This discussion reminds me of Gilbert Gosseyn in "The
World of Null-A", who would get killed only to wake up
in a new version of his body. Because the bodies were
being "grown" and sent out into the world on a preset
schedule, he was even conditioned with an urge for self-
destructive behavior when his "time was up" in the
currently active body (for some reason that I forget
there couldn't be two of him running around at once).
Gibson kinda hits the same issue in "Neuromancer"
with the software construct of the "Dixie Flatliner". He
reacts just like the person until questions of his true
nature are put to "him", at which point there's enough
characteristics of humanity in the software to make "it"
get very uncomfortable and distressed.
So it boils down to the question: Who are you?
The four answers that different people seem to give are:
o Brain (i.e., the physical matter, so
if you reconstitute another brain based on a
recording of all information about this one,
that's a different person--and you die if you're
dematerialized as part of the process)
o Energy-fields (I'm a little vague on
what the ramifications of this are, but assuming
energy such as light takes a finite amount of time
to get somewhere, you're also dead in instantaneous
transmission mode)
o Soul (or some intangible manifestation
of Being that experiences your body for however
long it's able to maintain some minimal functions
--you could argue this either way for whether your
old soul gets the reconstituted body or whether
some new spirit from Beyond jumps in and grabs it)
o Information (this looks like the only
option that makes survival in the new body sound
like a pretty good shot, especially since the Bell
test seems to indicate that information can travel
instantaneously via some unknown mechanism--but do
you then split into two "yous" if it's just a
straight COPY instead of a COPY/DELETE?)
|
375.30 | some replies, sorry no pointers | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Thu Sep 04 1986 10:03 | 21 |
| -the soul
I've been assuming that the soul does not exist. I think that
if the soul DID exist, there would be no problem (until you
tried to make duplicates).
- "psychic" tests
I included this for the benefit of _Spock_Must_Die_
- "but did the original die?"
the original is destroyed, atomized, converted to an amount
of energy = Mc^2. I don't know, is that death?
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
375.31 | Everywhichway but Clear | INK::KALLIS | | Thu Sep 04 1986 11:02 | 20 |
| re .27:
As I recall, the reason there could be no more than one Gilbert
Gossyn runnuing around in _World of Null-A_ was because ...
Well, in the words of (I think Gosseyn I or the taxicab [and if
you don't believe me, read the book]), "I..I'm not sure exactly
how it works. Some sort of automatic triggering process," as best
I can remember.
Which was good except for:
1) Gosseyn I was "brought to life" by a previous version (still
alive during the story) and given false memories.
2) Gosseyn III (in _Null-A Three_) was simultaneously alive with
Gossyn II, with no real difficulties.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
375.32 | soul mattering | MORIAH::REDFORD | DREADCO staff researcher | Sun Sep 07 1986 13:02 | 18 |
| The only line I remember from "Spock Must Die!" is:
"A difference that makes no difference is no difference."
which was not original with Blish. The point was that if the
transporter is so good that no difference between the copy and the
original can be detected, then it doesn't matter. Now, the question
comes up about souls - does the transporter duplicate them or not? Well,
the statement above still applies. Having a soul must cause some kind
of difference in the entity that possesses it. This usually means
that something of the person persists after the destruction of the body.
How can you tell? It used to be easy - people communicated with
ghosts and spirits all the time. The test would then be to duplicate
someone, kill the duplicate, and then try to get in touch with the
duplicate's spirit through a medium. Nowadays, though, we don't
accept the evidence of mediums. The only way to check is to die yourself,
which makes it difficult to publish.
/jlr
|
375.33 | Side Topic - Brundle+fly+??? | TRUCK::PRG_GRP | | Wed Sep 10 1986 15:51 | 16 |
| <$ SET TOPIC/LATERAL>
Along another line of thought on teleportation, as it applies in
The Fly in particular. The computer in The Fly 'found' 2 organisms
in the 'source' telepod, (remember the divided screen displaying
things such as 'plasma volume' for Brundle and the fly?) I wondered
at that point: why didn't the computer decide that there were many
(many!) organisms with separate and different genomes: we all know
that we are 'host' to myriad bacteria, viruses, who knows what else.
How did the computer not consider them? Physical proximity to Brundle,
whereas the fly was a large (inches?) distance from Brundle? And,
the fly itself is probably host to other microorganisms. And, now
that I think of it, couldn't there be other microorganisms in the
air within the pod?!
-Jim
|
375.34 | Brundlecoli! | CDR::YERAZUNIS | VAXstation Repo Man | Sun Sep 28 1986 12:51 | 5 |
| YECCCHHHHH!
You're quite right- before we got Brundlefly we should have gotten
Brundlebacterium.
|
375.35 | OOP! ACK! PHFT! | EDEN::KLAES | I enjoy working with people. | Tue Sep 30 1986 14:44 | 10 |
| I just had to throw this in -
In the leatest BLOOM COUNTY comic strip, Oliver Wendell Jones
tried a "FLY"-type teleportation experiment, and Bill the Cat got
caught in the process; now the two are becoming like each other!
If you know the strip, you know it's a riot!
Larry
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375.36 | | CEO03::SESSIONS | Welcome to the real world. | Tue Sep 30 1986 17:13 | 4 |
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Isn't Oliver Wendell Jones the little black computer hacker?
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375.37 | | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Tue Sep 30 1986 18:46 | 16 |
| Yes Oliver Wendell Jones is the hacker. Although I wouldn't limit
him to computers. Remember the Star Wars Defense system he cooked
up for Opus?
Yes, Oliver has all sorts of problems with his teleporter, "My Jaguar?
in orbit? around pluto?"
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P.S. But anyway, <spoiler>
it's all a dream
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375.38 | Pointer in .1 updated to new location | DECNA::CANTOR | moderator | Tue Nov 25 1986 07:46 | 0
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