"Analogic reasoning works when you have the right reference frame. We need a new one."(James Tiptree Jr, "Mamma Come Home" ["The Mother Ship"], The Worlds of IF Science Fiction, 1968)
"Deception, in a system of this sort, can be defined simply as entropy [...] And of course, entropy, or degradation of order, is avoided by all civilized beings, since no local increase in complexity can offset entropic effects in the larger matrix." (James Tiptree Jr, "Faithful to Thee, Terra, in Our Fashion" ["Parimutuel Planet"], Galaxy, 1969)
"First his math interest seemed to evaporate after the special calculus course, although he never blew an exam. Then he switched to the pre-college anthropology panel the school was trying. Here he made good grades and acted very motivated, until the semester when the visiting research team began pounding on sampling techniques and statistical significance. Hobie had no trouble with things like Chi square, of course. But after making his A in the final he gave them his sweet, unbelieving smile and faded." (James Tiptree Jr, "Beam Uds Home", 1969)
"Entropy! The development of reliable knowledge is anti-entropic. Science’s task in a social system is comparable to the function of intelligence in the individual. It holds against disorganization, oscillation, noise, entropy. But we, here - we’ve allied ourselves with an entropic subsystem. We’re not generating structure, we’re helping to degrade the system!" (James Tiptree Jr, "I’m Too Big But I Love to Play", Amazing, 1970)
"The temporal engineers shrugged, and so did the mathematicians. They told her that paradoxes were accumulating elsewhere in the society by that time, too, even though only a few supra-legal heavy persons owned jumpers. Alternate time-tracks, perhaps? Time-independent hysteresis maybe? Paradoxes of course were wrong. They shouldn’t happen." (James Tiptree Jr, "Forever to a Hudson Bay Blanket", Fantastic, 1972)
"You can understand why a system would seek information - but why in hell does it offer information? Why do we strive to be understood? Why is a refusal to accept communication so painful?" (James Tiptree Jr, "Ten Thousand Light-Years From Home", 1973)
"In the wastes of nonbeing it is born, flickers out, is born again and holds together, swells and spreads. In lifelessness it lives, against the gray tide of entropy it strives, improbably persists, gathering itself into ever richer complexities until it grows as a swelling wave." (James Tiptree Jr, "She Waits for All Men Born", 1976)
"There're two kinds of people - those who think there are two kinds of people and those who have more sense." (James Tiptree Jr, "Up the Walls of the World", 1978)
No comments:
Post a Comment