Retlaw83 wrote:They say good art doesn't need to be explained (...)
Dude, that sentence took me back some. A particular part on the History of Art classes I took when the subject wasn't history itself and rather the meaning of art, turning the history class into a philosophy class. I hated it.
Suffice to say that I fancy the whole "what is art?" debate (and its many branches) completely pointless, since half of the time you're just arguing the definition of the word itself (so why not grab a dictionary instead?) and the other half you're jousting pointless arguments that never really go anywhere.
From then on you'd go into "what's good/bad art", "what's a masterpiece", blah blah blah, alas, the spaniards call this "discussing the sex of the angels". As far as I'm concerned, how you end up being graded is out of your hands almost entirely. Almost, because you have the choice on how honest you are with your work. People's reaction towards what comes from within (the soul, if you will) are all the more powerful, and those people that connect are the ones who'll be singing your praises in the aftermath.
What, last sentence seem a little absurd? I know it does to me. But you only have to think back to that speech that got you fired up, that line in the movie that made your eyes water, that song chorus that makes the hair on the back of your neck stand on end. That's what I'm on about, and I reckon, as a "creator" (notice how I avoid the word artist), that's what one should be chasing.
There's a audience for everything as well, so ultimate considerations of worth are pretty meaningless when you have access to a technology that shortens distances like the net does. 90 percent of the world hates your work? Who cares, that still leaves 600 million people that might love it, most of which you have the potential to reach. And that'd be a big fucking success.
To my mind, and safe to say you won't find this in any book, anyone endeavoring in any sort of artistic project should just ignore definitions and just fucking do it, no overthinking, no pretensions, no overanalizing, no discussing with others. Especially in writing (the branch in which I've the most experience and fair to say that my actual experience is quite lacking) I find you create the actual gems (either on purpose or by chance) when you get an idea and then just vomit it out, screw punctuation, spelling and whatnot. Hammer it out if you have to, just get it done. After a good night's rest or a week or whatever, you come back to it and besides the main idea you had you'll recognize the tiny sparkles amongst some (sometimes a lot of) bile and now you'll have the necessary distance to start chiseling away, shedding unnecessary weight and shining the spots on what's of real worth.
Then, I figure you have the right idea. Get some new input, a fresh pair of eyes that'll hopefully give you angles you hadn't considered. From then on, it's a matter justifying your choices, not only to yourself but the audience as well.
Shit, I have to stop posting here from work. Having to stop writing a sentence to do something else then coming back to it makes for some long-winded shit indeed. As if I didn't already have a tendency to rant.
Retlaw83 wrote:I try to write in a way where anyone can interpret what they're reading in their own way and still be right.
If I'm not misinterpreting that statement, then I guess it could be explained with a pretty bad game analogy. You're trying to give people Fallout instead of a linear corridor shooter, right? Commendable, but don't you feel you're over-reaching? And no, I'm not suggesting you are but shouldn't you hit the heart before aiming at the head?
Retlaw83 wrote:One of the biggest rewards of writing is seeing the reactions of people, and I learn a lot about myself in the process.
Nothing like it. One could almost say it's better than sex. Almost.
Sorry to break down this next part into sections for the sake of convenience but I shudder to think how I could possibly say everything I want to without making it look extremely convoluted. As if it isn't going to anyway.
With the sheriff acting extremely human, I wanted to raise the question of what a person is - how much of that is determined by biology, and how much is determined by the mind? And adding into that, when you have various entities that are considered people but have fundamental differences in how they're made, should the law discriminate?
So the robot has a mind, then? I thought it'd be a cpu. I jest, but if you want critical questions to be asked regarding whether or not a robot has any place being treated like a human just because he serves a purpose in society you have to have a robot behave like a robot and get to where he is by virtue of the logical decisions he makes as a robot, decisions that might not have been made were he a human (and that's where you strike the difference between a human and a robot - brain =/= cpu) and then get actual human input from both sides, for instance, deputies that empathize with the robot for his unfunny pre-programmed retorts and his ability to play old music inspite of his dead eyes and crushing handshake, while some civilians feel threathened by his superior physique/strength/shooting skills/whatever and dislike his thorough enforcing of the law even though he's part of the reason they're able to sleep sound at night.
If he behaves like a man, if he's treated by others like a man, if as far as the narrator cares (besides the plugging in to recharge) he is a man, then why should the reader relate to him as if he was anything else?
If you shoot a robot in a place that would kill a human but not the robot, or an alien in a non-fatal location that would murder a human what should be taken into account, the act itself or the intent of the act?
I see you came up with another alternative (the alien) yet disregarded the one I suggested, that of the man in impenetrable armor. I suggested that for a reason, which is to show you that what you're really discussing isn't whether or not robots should have the same rights as humans, it's whether shooting someone (given the time and space, a futuristic wild-west with basically the same laws as the old one) with the intent to kill should be treated as an offense punishable by death or not. Isn't it?
I'll suggest another scenario. This time imagine the wild west proper. Same laws as in EotB. Sheriff goes to drunkard. Drunkard shoots, misses sheriff and injures himself. Sheriff fails to draw a shoot in self-defence, rather apprehends the suspect and puts him on trial. Wouldn't that story have ended up the exact same way?
The other thing, wrapped up in whether law should discriminate in matters of who does what to who (and thus making justice no longer blind) is where do you draw the line between law and justice. At what point does the law become unjust? Is that quantifiable, or subjective? That's a question I intend to leave hanging.
"Guy shoots at me, I let him live, yet law says he should die. Why didn't I shoot back? What do I gain from his death? What do others gain from his death? Is it fair on him? Is it fair on his family? Does fairness have any place in a court of law?"
That you successfully do, and kudos for that.
You say the sheriff's choice was justifiable. I know other people who would find it deplorable, and yet others who would back him 100%; I wanted it to be ambiguous as to whether he made the correct choice, with "correct" itself being completely subjective. Perhaps I wasn't as successful in the execution as I wanted to be and need to work on it more.
Ah, but that's just it, my friend. "I" don't. YOU DO. Or at least the characters in your book seem to, the narrator doesn't provide an alternative, and the defendant doesn't get a chance to plead his case. In writing it the way you did, you, through the actions and inactions of characters and narrator, single out this as the only option and don't give the other option much mind, save a fleeting oversight of the robots "thoughts". When both options aren't dispassionately taken into account by not necessarily the narrator, but at least the author, you lose all hope of ambiguity. According to the rules you (the author) set, he made the right choice. Heck, he made the only logical choice.
In fact I'd defend much the contrary, why should a bucket of bolts have -any- say in what future befits a criminal, when all his logic can be faulted on the lack of knowledge or ability of his programmers or worse, corrupted by viral activity? Thing is, your robot isn't a bucket of bolts.
He's just a man called Robot.