First, the movie made me think about the purpose of life. Generally, people all enjoy a comfortable and easy life, but why would these people choose to go to space or live in an ice land? These places are definitely not suitable for humans to live. The bottom line is that they need the capability to survive in these places. But even with the full capacity, it is still quite harsh to survive there that Ryan hated space at a certain point.
Today I also finished the movie Gravity. To be honest, I did not expect the movie to be so breathtaking. Just wanted to share a few things here:
First, the movie made me think about the purpose of life. Generally, people all enjoy a comfortable and easy life, but why would these people choose to go to space or live in an ice land? These places are definitely not suitable for humans to live. The bottom line is that they need the capability to survive in these places. But even with the full capacity, it is still quite harsh to survive there that Ryan hated space at a certain point.
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I finally watched this movie in early November 2014. It is a very interesting movie, but there are a few things that made me think:
First is the moral issue of the robots. What moral standards should robots hold when it comes to assisting humans? Should they do whatever the master told them to do or only do what is legal according to certain laws? Second is what factors in this movie that attracted Frank to the robot are. At the beginning, Frank really dislike the robot and refused to let it stay on. He was not cooperative at all. But at a certain point, the robot became his friend. He walked with the robot, talked to the robot, and made plans involving the robot, and even became dependent on the robot. When the robots' memory is a threat again Frank's safety, Frank tried everything to avoid erasing the robot's memory. Third is the customization of the robot. People can mass produce robots. They are identical. When the memory is removed from the robot, one robot is just as the same as any other robot. When Frank looked at a robot with the same appearance of his own serving other people, he paused a little bit. I figure that humans have a little bit of sense of exclusion. People do not want others to share what they have that are very personal or close. Unlike uniqueness of human, these robots are not customized. How do people handle this feeling of the same type of robot serving all other people? People might feel that themselves are not special. What then? I need to go back and watch again. I just read an interesting article about the way human treating technology is like treating religion by Daniel Fox. The author compared the concept of salvation with the way that technology helped conquer human disability. The most interesting point of the article is the debate between that perfection brings happiness or that imperfection brings happiness. I would say neither is right. In my opinion, anyone who aim for perfection or imperfection to bring happiness will be disappointed with unhappiness. This is just not the root of happiness.
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