I disagree with a fair amount of your post, especially the idea that Amanda can be sure Kicha's statement will start a civil war. But also, making a vote title which requires searching to find its meaning tends to be... far from optimal.[O] Satygraha - Kicha's statement of intent is sure to start a civil war among the Shiplords. That must have been a terrible choice for her; she's going to need all the help she can get, and that we can provide for her.
Kind of a variant of the Peter Principle: They assigned themselves the job of 'Guardian of Reality' but are unfortunately not suitable for it.What's so fucked up about their society that a video game can shatter one's world view to want to change that?
The reason the Shiplords utilize the "first contact decimation" is because they wholeheartedly believe that it's the ONLY way to prevent a species from reaching a state where "blowing up the whole universe" is something that they are willing and able to do. The "video game" was meant to be presented as a Kobayashi Maru: an unwinnable scenario based on real events that showed that there was no "good" way to stop one of the Sorrows.What's so fucked up about their society that a video game can shatter one's world view to want to change that?
To be fair, you beat that simulation (calling it a video game is enormously reductionist given the amount of work and Secret use put into making it function) via liberal application of totally-not-magic.Of course, now that Amanda and crew "beat" the video game on their first try, they are now in a position to make the claim that "maybe you Shiplords just aren't very good at this."
At the level she's working on, if you're not using liberal amounts of "totally-not-magic", are you even trying?To be fair, you beat that simulation (calling it a video game is enormously reductionist given the amount of work and Secret use put into making it function) via liberal application of totally-not-magic.
But apart from that, pretty much, yes.
At the level she's working on, if you're not using liberal amounts of "totally-not-magic", are you even trying?
As I understand it the important thing we did, that no other shiplord thought to do, was to straight up ask "what's your problem?"
It's...not as simple as that. A major issue was finding a middle ground between escalating straight to an all-out war that the Shiplords very well could have lost if they did so without proper preparation but also making it clear that the Shiplords truly were what they claimed - that being a species as ancient and powerful as they'd claimed.As I understand it the important thing we did, that no other shiplord thought to do, was to straight up ask "what's your problem?"
That doesn't require magic. The magic we used was against the final desperation attack, which I don't really think is critical? Does it matter if the fleet leadership died and the rest of the fleet escape? Have I misunderstood something and a complete factory by force of arms is required?
Well, yes.And it shouldn't be ignored how Amanda as well as those of her landing team - of specific import here is Mir, given his Focus of Peace - were falling back on Practice to guide their action. The obvious not-magic was the defence that broke the simulation. It wasn't the only use of it.
The truth could be anywhere on the spectrum between those two points, I suppose
I was assuming that the shiplord's psyche, epitomized by their obsession with personal privacy, would have prevented them directly asking a similar question to what we posed, and that psychological phenomenon got distorted to current practice of decimation. If shiplords are capable of directly stating their problems and giving the other side the opportunity to address them then every single "lesson of pain" is even more evil act.
But the most important point in this isn't how the Shiplords would react, but how the Sphere would. In your departure, the Contact Fleet would have shown clear mastery of the Second Secret, enough to make those terribly brilliant minds who led the Sphere to pause and consider the dangers of truly antagonising (in their opinion) what might actually be a peer power.
More data required to give an answer you could feasibly have IC. Your viewpoints currently aren't sure which it is. Mandy's aware that Practice made enormously easier for them to hit on the solution set they did, especially so perfectly, but it's difficult to trace beyond that. Could a bunch of regular humans have done it? Maybe, given enough time.The truth could be anywhere on the spectrum between those two points, I suppose; do you feel like commenting about where on the spectrum we are?
The number of things that can't be done with Practice, given sufficient time and effort, are vanishingly small.The follow-up question would then be: could the SL have done it, had they Practice?
Okay, then perhaps a better question: could the Shiplords have solved the Hijivian Scenario, without Practice but having sufficient training / empathy, given the fundamental nature of their Souls as they exist today? Are they, currently, collectively, fundamentally unable to even see the solution that Amanda created, and now presented to them?The number of things that can't be done with Practice, given sufficient time and effort, are vanishingly small.
Kicha was able to understand and interpret the scenario you'd created, and the broader effects of it, within relative moments of her first viewing. She clearly possessed the ability to understand the solution. The question of why no one was able to find that balance point in all the time since the War of the Sphere, and how it might relate to Shiplord souls, isn't really one you can answer without an in-depth examination of a Shiplord soul.Okay, then perhaps a better question: could the Shiplords have solved the Hijivian Scenario, without Practice but having sufficient training / empathy, given the fundamental nature of their Souls as they exist today? Are they, currently, collectively, fundamentally unable to even see the solution that Amanda created, and now presented to them?
Shiplords are capable of utilizing enough force to give the hijven pause, but they are not able to make the sphere's mind listen. The important part is again the conversation beforehand. It didn't seem that Amanda was using practice till the end, right? A mundane statement of grievance and then laying out that war will be the result of attempting further unwilling expansion seems to be the default choice for humans, what's the average choice for shiplords?You won the Contact Fleet free, as so many others have," Kicha explained, sweeping a hand through the regimented order of War Fleets clustering at the Shiplord border. That was as expected, at this point. "But according to the simulation, you also made Sphere's Minds listen."
This is basically our situation right now, and if we have to dissect a shiplord's soul to find out, then so be it."The Hjivin are hiding something, something integral to how their culture functions. I don't think anyone without Contact's experience with this could have found it, and we had to go looking. It wasn't obvious in the least. I know there have been disagreements in command channels about possible reasons, but I can say this with total certainty. This is not a mark of cultural shame, it's something still active in their current societal matrix. And they did not want us to find it."
Amanda using Practice is rarely obvious. In some ways, she is always using Practice.It didn't seem that Amanda was using practice till the end, right?
No.This is basically our situation right now, and if we have to dissect a shiplord's soul to find out, then so be it.