Hawk227 wrote...
@CGG
The Catalyst is only one of many reasons why I oppose synthesis, but he's a major issue in why I'm disinclined towards control. Take him out of the equation, and I still pick control every time.
Also, I think you understate Synthesis a lot. I know you imagine it as a slight adjustment (turns everyone's hair purple, a slight homogenization, ipod implant, etc), but there's nothing in the text to support that. It could just as easily be turning everything into Reaper goo or husks. We have zero idea either way. In the absence of data, the reputation of the one providing (or advocating) the choice becomes important.
Choice B, the apparent stand-in for synthesis, contains way more information than what we actually have. If synthesis had been explained as "All organics can now turn on computers telepathically, and AI have empathy" then I would be on board. But its not. It's not explained at all. The only data we have either way comes from someone who thought the Reapers were an appropriate solution, and he thinks this an appropriate solution.
While it may sound like I'm ignoring your point, it's really that I just completely disagree with it. In the absence of information, the running commentary is absolutely important. Also, unlike this analogy (and your Manson one previously) the narrator is inexorably tied to the issue. He isn't just random evil guy. He is the creator of the most evil entities ever, entities designed to solve the same problem that synthesis supposedly solves. He isn't manson saying we should do something about global warming, he's the unabomber telling you that whatever is in that box will stem the tide of evil technology.
EDIT: You seem to have edited choice b after I started responding. Oh well, I think my point still stands.
EDIT2: In the interest of clarity, I'll say that if it had not been the Catalyst but rather Balak presenting the choice, then his input would have been irrelevant, and I would probably choose control (but maybe destroy).
Not really. The Catalyst is some demigod expositor general by intent. He says the Reapers were his solution *before* the Crucible presented him with new options. He is a very powerful shackled AI or VI; he says there are things he cannot do and needs you to choose. The story explanation really isn't that bad or unclear.
You don't know who made him, but apparently some race about to get wiped out by synthetics that made him as a savior. He isn't anymore evil than some doctor using triage planning. Now you can argue that it isn't necessarily true that a singularity in which synthetics always wipe organics will occur, but I'll always defer to what the authors of a work of fiction say about their own universe. If the Catalyst is mistaken, okay, then his action is unwarranted. If the Catalyst is correct, then it is warranted until he has further possible reactions ala the Crucible. Until they clarify, we don't know. Obviously, he's not perfect though, because he didn't foresee the possibility of you being there.
And unless you think turning everyone into Reaper goo or husks would be an advancement, there is no in context reason for Shepard to think that a result of synthesis. The Catalyst plainly describes in admittedly vague terms that Shepard will be disseminated and create roboDNA. Nothing implies or entails the possibility that everyone will just be harvested or turned into mindless husks.





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