Subject: That's assuming survive/breed is a universal thing!
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Posted on: 2019-05-11 05:02:00 UTC

This might get really pretentious, pardon me. I've got no real scientific knowledge of any of this, I'm working mostly on a writer's sense of 'this seems kinda cool and also somewhat logical enough to convince a reading audience.' Soft science fiction, let's say.

Right. So, something with a totally different perception of time and space might not even consider mortality in the same way we do, right? It's a given, in a linear timeframe that sort of, marches forwards ahead that pretty much every system we see has the basis of taking energy --> using energy for movement --> running out of energy. You use energy in order to travel onwards until you run out of energy and die.

Assuming this sort of energy consumption is only a construct of a very specific and linear perception of time--our own perception of it, which we can't really do anything to diverge from (again, no science at all, here,)--maybe other 'sapients' with different presences in spacetime would respond totally differently.

The Tralfamadorians do play with this a little bit: they seem to be just as mortal as anyone else is and take their own impending deaths (and the fact that they destroy the whole universe accidentally) for granted. However, they don't really care, because they can just freely hop from their own death to their own birth however they please. I suppose from our own perspective, they might just look as mortal as we do, but with a really, really strange attitude towards it. A Tralfamadorian in a fight wouldn't even be all too concerned about dying--if they do, they can just hop back and enjoy that nice spa they were in a few days ago.

It's also just as likely that this sort of being wouldn't really be able to interact with us at all and just be like a sort of plant or a rock or a very smelly, electric wind. This is more realistic but it's a bit boring isn't it?
It's inherent, I suppose, for these aliens to have some degree of humanness, so that we can at least interact with them, have some kind of logical plot with them that isn't just an astronaut observing some interesting phenomena. It's more about what bits of humanness you want to remove and where.

Anyway, it's an interesting thing to consider: assuming there were sapient things out there that, for whatever reasons, didn't really respond to that survive/breed impulse, and they were close enough in intelligence to us so as to not be like a plant or something, how would that kinda, manifest? What other instincts would they have?

This is assuming a whole lot of things, I suppose. Like I said, awfully soft science. I'm looking at it more, I suppose, from a philosophical viewpoint? Could be fun, anyhow.

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