Jossverse 1: Emotional Resonance & Rocket Launchers
TV, movies, web media--this thread is the home for any Joss projects that don't already have their own threads, such as Dr. Horrible.
To follow more of the general psychological thing, there's an amazing book called "When Rabbit Howls." Some have said it's fake, kind of like that guy on Oprah who faked his trauma, and if that's so, I'm bummed, but even if it's fake, it's a hell of a tale. Massive personality fracturing, with the personalities aware of each other to a degree and protecting the core identity, who was horrifically abused. (Part of me that hopes it's faked is because of the described abuse. I'm not yet that much of a cynic that I can accept those descriptions with a sad shrug.)
Even if it's fiction, there are parts of it that are achingly lovely and painful and worth the read.
As much as this feels like a cop-out, I guess it depends on what we mean by free will. It's the question I wonder about when I think about the possibility of God -- if all of me, moles and short-sightedness and dislike for olives and affection for Wildean humor etc., was created intentionally, do I still have free will? Being who I am, I cannot imagine that I would ever choose to, say, kill a puppy for fun. If that is innate in me, does that mean I don't have free will as it relates to puppy-killing? If you combine a bunch of non-puppy-killers into one personality, selecting specifically for that trait, and then put them in a situation where they could kill a puppy, then the outcome is a foregone conclusion. But the personality still has free will. I think. Although the idea of synthesizing a personality in the first place has major moral swirliness that I don't think I can parse at the moment.
I didn't rewatch, so this is definitely a paraphrase, but I think there was the very definite implication that she and Motorcycle Race Client had had sex
Oh they definitely had sex, but that wasn't my (very fine) point. Typo Boy said that the rapes in the first two eps were presented "as titillating as possible". Implying there was sex and/or showing it as a brief flashback during the mindwipe sequence hardly fits that description.
Keeping along with the "tv version of DID" argument. Isn't it less a question of "if the active personality consents is it consensual for the others?" and more of (again, with the tv version) deliberately triggering someone to shift from a personality who might or might not consent to one who will? Comparing it to DID alone removes a pretty critical actor from the equation. The actives aren't just randomly accessing personalities without conscious human intervention.
Hm. Although now I think about it, I wouldn't previously have said April from IWMTLY had free will.
In fact, I'm starting to realize that this is framing itself in my head as a question of the rights of the imprint, in which case I've usually been on the "if it's got a consciousness, then treat it like a person" side in science fiction. I'm trying to figure out if I'm letting that sway me too much.
But no, I still think there's a distinction. Even if the personality is manufactured exactly to find the client attractive, the personality still finds the client attractive. Even if we know what they're going to choose, they still do choose.
Hmm. I am still debating this in my own head, just so you know. I reserve the right to contradict myself later.
Comparing it to DID alone removes a pretty critical actor from the equation.
Point. But in fact here the main personality (TV science here!) has consented to the use of such a trigger.
Of course, I think your point was that it's a bad analogy, not that I should just complicate an already bad analogy. Good point.
(Wow! When did this become my main thread? I feel like we're back in the days of Faith morality arguments! Anyway, I have to go test-drive a car now. So long, imaginary people.)
Interesting questions...I don't really have any answers, but I think this is why I'll keep watching.
Well, that and my crush on ED.
Assuming Jenny had the free-will to say no to someone who was threatening to kill her, do you also think the Dollhouse has given her free will to turn down a client who'd forgotten his deodorant and smelled bad?
Yes. I figure the imprint is tailored to the person. If a guy WANTS a girl who doesn't care if he smells bad, well, then the Dollhouse could use a personality who doesn't care. But I don't think they deliberately tinker with specific things. Except for asthma, I guess.
If, therefore, "hot chick who will have lots of wild sex with me" is part of the criteria, then there is no way the Active would NOT have sex.
Which, again, is total lack of free will. To me.
And I disagree because of what Emily said. If we are Who We Are, and our own experiences and character traits determine our actions, then our will isn't entirely "free." We often stop ourselves from doing things. In a sense, our will is free not to be free. Or something. What I'm saying is that if a personality is built to act a certain way, and she acts that way without issues, then maybe that's just who she is. I don't think we know for a fact that an Active can't
refuse
to do something.
Let me put it this way. Let's say a client wanted someone to go to the comic book store with. So the Dollhouse imprints an Active with my personality. Now, that Active is not going to have any problem going to the comic book store with this client; he'll enjoy it. Does the Active lack free will just because he wants to go to a comic book store? If he were incapable of
not
going to the comic book store, then there would be an issue, but I don't think we have enough evidence for that. They haven't set up a situation like that.
I don't think that was a good example. I should just let Emily talk; she's making more sense than I am.
They haven't set up a situation like that.
See -- and I really *am* thinking hard about your points, and Emily's -- I still think it comes down to a simple matter of economics/client satisfaction. The clients have to be paying insane amounts of money, and when you have someone paying that much, they want a guarantee that their experience will be perfect.
Let's say a client wanted someone to go to the comic book store with. So the Dollhouse imprints an Active with my personality. Now, that Active is not going to have any problem going to the comic book store with this client; he'll enjoy it. Does the Active lack free will just because he wants to go to a comic book store?
If you're assuming that the imprints have free will, but also that they're just an imprint of someone who really, really likes doing [x activity], that's still not a guarantee that the imprint will do [x activity]. You can't program an imprint that would always, no matter what, definitely you betcha agree to have sex, IF you're also saying they have free will.
And the clients want a guarantee, given the amount of money they're paying.
The clients have to be paying insane amounts of money, and when you have someone paying that much, they want a guarantee that their experience will be perfect.
They are also assembling these imprints from existing personalities, which means they can probably tailor the probability of acceptance/refusal.
After all, if a man just wants a woman who will 100% sleep with him, he can hire a prostitute. This is a different kind of thing.