Thursday 14 March 2024

Intolerance And Diversity

The Ai Chun in World Without Stars and the Alori in The Peregrine cannot tolerate the existence of a culture fundamentally different from their own whereas the Monwaingi in After Doomsday divide into radically different "Societies," - e.g., extremely collectivist or extremely individualistic - which can coexist peacefully on a single colony planet. In the Technic History, we are given to understand that Ythrian choths also vary widely although perhaps we do not see this in practice. Ythrians find it difficult to understand human concepts of "nation" and "government." These are four of many works by Poul Anderson, all of them different. All that we really know about aliens is that they are alien and are bound to be different. One single datum will be worth more than any amount of speculation.

4 comments:

S.M. Stirling said...

Poul had to make the Ythrians winged for them to have a civilization at all -- a certain density of contact is necessary for that.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

With choths being how Ythrians built something bigger, in theory, than the nuclear family.

For humans that was this: family, clan, tribe, nations (large and small).

Ad astra! Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

Sean: yes. Family/clan/tribe have existed from the very earliest point we can detect.

Nations (or city-states) are psychologically sort of an enlarged tribe.

So are other things -- for example, a trade-union builds on the same emotional reflexes as a tribe, and so does an army or a sports team's supporters.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

I agree, and I'm sure some people can get very emotionally attached, tribalistic, even about chess clubs!

Ad astra! Sean