viernes, 18 de noviembre de 2016
FROM STEPHEN KING TO STEPHEN HAWKING: a new kind of terror
Stephen Hawking: a new master of terror
Stephen
King is a master of terror, right up there with Edgar Allan Poe and H.P.
Lovecraft. His works dwells on strange things and people, deals with pure
terror. There are three kinds of terror, he says: Gross Terror, such as a head
tumbling down a flight of stairs; Horror, such as the dead walking around and
Pure Terror, the worst kind, which is when “you come home and notice everything
you own has been taken away and replaced by an exact substitute. It's when the
lights go out and you feel something behind you, you hear it, you feel its
breath against your ear, but when you turn around, there's nothing there...”
King
has excelled in pure terror, the kind he describes in “The Shining”, when he
writes about those huge halls of the hotel now deserted, except for voices and
faces of the past which make the hair in the back of your neck stand up.
Now
Stephen King has a competitor in pure terror. His name is almost identical:
Stephen Hawking, perhaps our most famous astrophysicist. The terror he inspires
is probably bigger than anything King could have written. It is the ultimate
terror, one that speaks about the total annihilation of the human race and of
our planet. In his latest warnings this genius tells us that leaving Earth is
our only hope for survival. According to Hawking the probability of a major
disaster to our planet is almost certain within the next 1000 years. If Man has
not been able to escape Earth in this period of time he is doomed. He also says
that a full development of artificial intelligence could spell the end of the
human race… “once humans fully develop
artificial intelligence, it will take off on its own and redesign itself at an
ever-increasing rate”, he predicts.
This
is pure terror, in a scale that Stephen King could never match.
If
we cannot find a way to travel to the stars within a reasonable period of time
the disappearance of the human race due to a natural event, such as the one
that killed all dinosaurs during the end of the Cretaceous period, would also
represent the end of the belief that we are made in God’s image, that we have a
soul and that we are destined to live forever in a heaven, if we behave well on
this earth.
Stephen
King only writes about pure terror but his work is fiction. Stephen Hawking
talks about pure terror but his is real, he predicts.
If
this new master of pure terror is right we should be terrified. Even in the
best of cases, if Man is able to escape Earth, he would have been an active agent
of its destruction.
Will
Man eternally wander among the stars, destructing every place he finds? King,
Lovecraft, Poe could never match this terrifying thought.
Stephen
King is a master of terror, right up there with Edgar Allan Poe and H.P.
Lovecraft. His works dwells on strange things and people, deals with pure
terror. There are three kinds of terror, he says: Gross Terror, such as a head
tumbling down a flight of stairs; Horror, such as the dead walking around and
Pure Terror, the worst kind, which is when “you come home and notice everything
you own has been taken away and replaced by an exact substitute. It's when the
lights go out and you feel something behind you, you hear it, you feel its
breath against your ear, but when you turn around, there's nothing there...”
King
has excelled in pure terror, the kind he describes in “The Shining”, when he
writes about those huge halls of the hotel now deserted, except for voices and
faces of the past which make the hair in the back of your neck stand up.
Now
Stephen King has a competitor in pure terror. His name is almost identical:
Stephen Hawking, perhaps our most famous astrophysicist. The terror he inspires
is probably bigger than anything King could have written. It is the ultimate
terror, one that speaks about the total annihilation of the human race and of
our planet. In his latest warnings this genius tells us that leaving Earth is
our only hope for survival. According to Hawking the probability of a major
disaster to our planet is almost certain within the next 1000 years. If Man has
not been able to escape Earth in this period of time he is doomed. He also says
that a full development of artificial intelligence could spell the end of the
human race… “once humans fully develop
artificial intelligence, it will take off on its own and redesign itself at an
ever-increasing rate”, he predicts.
This
is pure terror, in a scale that Stephen King could never match.
If
we cannot find a way to travel to the stars within a reasonable period of time
the disappearance of the human race due to a natural event, such as the one
that killed all dinosaurs during the end of the Cretaceous period, would also
represent the end of the belief that we are made in God’s image, that we have a
soul and that we are destined to live forever in a heaven, if we behave well on
this earth.
Stephen
King only writes about pure terror but his work is fiction. Stephen Hawking
talks about pure terror but his is real, he predicts.
If
this new master of pure terror is right we should be terrified. Even in the
best of cases, if Man is able to escape Earth, he would have been an active agent
of its destruction.
Will
Man eternally wander among the stars, destructing every place he finds? King,
Lovecraft, Poe could never match this terrifying thought.
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3 comentarios:
Puede que si o puede que no. Hawkins debe estar pensando en la probabilidad que nos caiga un meteorito gigante en 'ese tiempo.
No creo que la humanidad desaparezca como los dinosaurios, pero es posible que quede muy diezmada si no desarrolla maneras de saber si hay ese desastre en camino y si no desarrolla sistemas para desviarlo o destruirlo. Tenemos cerca de mil a~nos para resolverlo.
Es que Mr. Hawkins vaticina el futuro Venezolano y los desastres que va a cometer Trump?
As an antidote, I propose Alfred E. Newman: "What, me worry?"
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