After Viewing (Elementary School Diary)

Tremaine 2022-04-24 07:01:07

?About love Little Miss's love for Andrew is to wait and give him free love, Posher taught him imperfection and mistakes, tolerance makes lover grow, jealousy and struggle make lover together? About people we have been pursuing but never have infinite Time, the robot can live forever but he wants to gain human dignity. Andrew has human intelligence, senses, perception, psychology, (but can't reproduce offspring) and can still be immortal and just force himself to age and integrate into human beings. Conversely, is it possible for humans to retain their own memory, wisdom, and psychology, and gain immortality through mechanization? That's one point I wasn't satisfied with the movie enough. I support the inevitability of human birth, old age, sickness and death, but Andrew was forced to end his life for the sake of being an adult or just because of his own will rather than the laws of nature. I can only think that this is the character that drives the plot development, not the racial development I expected. inevitability. For example, after a robot acquires the physiological operating mechanism of a human, it will naturally age and die like a human for some reason. After all, survival is part of human nature. ?? Finally, the movie is a good movie, full of tears and laughter. There is also depth. Movies about the future of human beings can always arouse my sympathy or thinking, and strengthen my views in thinking.

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Extended Reading

Bicentennial Man quotes

  • Andrew Martin: [stomach growls] What was that?

    Portia: That's your stomach growling. You're hungry.

    [flatulence]

    Andrew Martin: Was that me?

    Portia: Yes.

    Andrew Martin: I thought it was you.

    Portia: No, it wasn't me.

    Andrew Martin: Really? Ooh. Do you do that?

    Portia: Sometimes... but quieter than that.

    Andrew Martin: I'll have to have Rupert make me a muffler.

  • [Andrew has transfused blood into his system]

    Rupert Burns: Galatea, my dear, where are we?

    Galatea: The transfusion is almost complete.

    Rupert Burns: Is that so?

    [to Andrew]

    Rupert Burns: Just goes to show you, Andrew - somebody becomes a human being, sooner or later, they do something monumentally stupid.

    Andrew Martin: You've been a great example, Rupert. How quickly will the blood degrade my system?

    Rupert Burns: Oh, I don't know. You exercise, eat right, I'd say 30, 40 years.

    Andrew Martin: That's a little vague, chief. You don't know exactly how long I'll last?

    Rupert Burns: Sorry.

    [puts his hand on Andrew's shoulder]

    Rupert Burns: Welcome to the human condition.