--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "emptybill" <emptyb...@...> wrote:
>
> Thanks for the tip. I'll look them up.
> 
> No one else on FFL seems to have poised this Q.
> I'm wondering if an ethicist, philosopher or social scientist has
> considered it?

It has been considered in science fiction since
its earliest days, and well. All of the best SF
authors know the limitation they labor under.
They may be trying to write about alien civil-
izations, but they just can't be too alien. If
they were, their readers could not "identify,"
and thus they cannot sell their fiction. As a 
result, most aliens are pretty much like us.
But this does not mean that these authors have
not tried to portray aliens who were *not*
like us.

This theme -- one species with its own view
of what ethics entails meeting another with an
entirely different, not only incompatible but
*inconceivable* view -- has been dealt with
often in classic science fiction. 

Might I recommend, as a starting point, a story
by Terry Carr in World's Best Science Fiction
1969 called "The Dance of the Changer and the
Three." Brilliant. Or many of the works of 
Ursula K. Le Guin, especially "The Left Hand
of Darkness" and "Rocannon's World."

> The time may be coming in the current century when we feel 
> the need to give it a very close look.

As Ray Bradbury once wrote about what he did for
a living, "'We do this not to predict the future 
but to prevent it."

> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, azgrey <no_reply@> wrote:
> 
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "emptybill" emptybill@ wrote:
> > >
> > > Who has written or theorized about "morality" in our possible future
> > > contacts with ET-s?
> > > How could we even evaluate them enough to judge if there is any form
> of
> > > "moral code".
> > >
> > > That means no human analogues. WTF?
> > >
> >
> > Sometime back TurquoiseB mentioned Mary Doria Russell's
> > "The Sparrow" and "Children Of God." They are compelling,
> > very well written, and have the crux of your question as a
> > key theme.
> >
>


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