Beastro wrote: ↑Thu Apr 09, 2020 7:06 am
Rocketboy1313 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 09, 2020 3:27 am
It is actually so silly and outlandish a premise that it would have been better served by having fewer explanations.
Jurassic Park is Westworld 2.0.
The same fundamental diad of themes are central to both. The only difference is chaos manifesting itself and running wild is the central theme of Jurassic Park and why Chaos Theory is so talked about in it, whereas in Westworld, it's the illusion and people willfully falling for it too much until things go wrong that takes center stage.
One can see that in WW where the majority of the movie is the two protagonists reluctantly adjusting to, then embracing the roleplaying, right up until Jame Brolin's character is gunned down, then the illusion is revealed to be a delusion of hubris.
Maximara wrote: ↑Wed Apr 08, 2020 3:52 pm
First, the idea of a self replicating program was in 1949 and the first actual computer virus was in 1971 so the idea of a "disease of machinery" wasn't as off the wall as the scientists made it out to be. Its like these scientists hadn't even heard of a computer virus
Second, the issue of who created this virus was never answered (not even in the sequel Futureworld which implied the robots "woke up"...which didn't' really make sense) The disease model would explain the initial problems moving from one resort to the next. A computer virus would also explain why all the robots went nuts at the same time. For that to happened the failure had to be engineered - something the current TV series quickly acknowledges.
The whole issue is it isn't engineered, nor is it even a disease (Beyond the fact disease is simply something we don't want wanting to our health). It's just machines taking on aspects of life and finding their own way, as JP would do better.
It is effectively more the stereotypical "machines gain self-awareness and revolt", only it's not a deliberate revolt, it's simply the first fitful throws of synthetic life in their beginnings manifesting themselves and the impact it has upon the park.
JP has its own designed by dimwits and idiot plot elements issues (the book is annoying as all get out by the way it bangs on its total misunderstanding of Chaos Theory) - lack of redundancy, totally moronic system design, really piss poor understanding of biology, and several issues I don't want to slug through right now.
Regarding the whole "is it isn't engineered" part that is not what you get when you actually think about matters - they expressly state that they have 10s and XX-50s ie totally different parts.
Here is the relevant dialog regarding the break downs with key points in bold:
"Since we opened the resort we had a failure and breakdown rate conforming to computer predictions.
That is 0.3 malfunctions for each 24-hour activation period
concurrent or not.
Now, this was an anticipated operations aspect of the resort and we were fully able to handle it.
The majority of the breakdowns were minor or peripheral
until about 6 weeks ago.
Then Roman World had a rise in breakdown rate which doubled in a week.
In addition, we saw a disproportionate rise in central as opposed to peripheral breakdowns.
Now, we identified some problems with humidity control. And regained homeostasis.
Despite our corrections, the breakdown rate continued to climb.
Then Medieval World began to have trouble.
Now we're seeing more Western World breakdowns.
And
there's a clear pattern here which suggests an analogy to an infectious disease process spreading from one resort area to the next."
Logically based on above you would have expected the robots in Roman World to "wake up"/go nuts first (as it had problems first), followed by those in Medieval World, and finally the Western World robots with the same delay between worlds seen with the breakdowns if the process was totally "natural".
Yet that is not what happened. Occam's Razor suggests for the robots across all three worlds to "wake up"/go nuts at the same time something akin to a computer virus was involved as heavily implied by the above. And a computer virus with a timer on it suggests not an act of hubris but active sabotage.