After the Dark--The Doomsday Philosopher

Eunice 2022-06-28 11:06:03

The Philosopher, or After the Dark, is a 2013 American sci-fi drama directed by Huddles. The film is expected to be released in Canada on April 15, 2014. The director has not made any famous films in his film career, and it is hoped that this work will create some fame for him.

In The Doomsday Philosopher, a philosophy teacher leads 20 students in their last class before graduation. In this class, the teacher forced the students to conduct a thought experiment. The experiment assumes that the students are at the site of a nuclear explosion with their teacher, and that nuclear radiation will soon reach them. There is a nuclear-proof site near them where they can take refuge, but the resources and oxygen available on the site are only enough for 10 people to survive for a year, and the influence of the nuclear explosion will last for another year. This means that only half of the people will survive. At this point, the teacher asked the students to draw random identity and skill cards to determine their role in the experiment, and to use this information to vote on which 10 people deserved to survive. Among the roles played by these students are farmers, electricians, poets, doctors, etc. The poet's character was shot by the teacher before the vote had even begun, because his skills were irrelevant to the continuation of the human race. Following the logic of the teacher's rationalism, the students began their voting. Similar experiments were carried out three times in total. The first time they failed, they did not survive. In the second experiment, the students found some additional conditions on the back of the cards about their characters, and because of these additional conditions, the results of the vote were slightly different from the first time, but they still failed. In the third experiment, a student obtained the adjudication power with the consent of everyone and chose 10 people who should survive alone. As for the result of the choice, some people think it was a success, and some people don't think so.

When voting on an individual's right to exist, the teacher's logic follows rationalism, and he will rationally analyze which roles will have an effect on the continuation of humanity. Like his students, they also naturally follow the teacher's pace to make choices and determine the value of each person. But for the audience, the answers are believed to be more diverse. Ultimately, it depends on how each person judges a person's worth based on their own values. Does the value of this person depend on his occupation, character, appearance, or something else? Personally, I think it depends on what the premise of the thesis is. If the ultimate goal is to continue the human race, it should maximize various survival and construction skills and ensure the probability of fertility. The pure rationalism of the teacher is most appropriate under this premise. What poets, sommeliers, etc. must indeed be discarded, But if the premise is to maintain the dignity and humanity of human beings, I will choose to let everyone live in the shelter for half a year, and then face death without any guilt and dare to face their own souls.

Since I have a very strong personal interest in philosophy, this film was especially wonderful for me. The direct presentation of philosophical themes through cinema is fascinating. From the very beginning of the film, this approach is eye-catching. The teacher introduces each topic by asking the students what their favorite philosophical topic is. One student said his favorite was the "infinite monkey theorem," and the camera followed the student's explanation of the topic to a monkey sitting in front of a typewriter typing, surrounded by a vast universe to express the concept of "infinity". The film also shows classic philosophical themes such as the "Trolley Problem" and "Ignorance is the Blessing Paradox". Whether or not the audience is familiar with these topics, there will be a lot of visual and intellectual satisfaction from them. Subsequent thought experiments also put the experimenters in real-world settings to express their practices and choices. This approach brings philosophical conundrums to life and allows students and audiences to be more careful in their choices.

The greatest charm of philosophy is its discernibility. Everyone has the right to defend their ideas. Of course, this does not mean that every idea is correct. The film has certain biases in different values, which does not prove that the ideas supported by the film are correct. After watching this movie, what values do you find yourself leaning more towards?

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Extended Reading
  • Harry 2022-03-20 09:02:33

    Well, the seemingly philosophical and seemingly pretending film is actually a fantasy in the mind of a man on paper. Where is the philosophy and there is logic, while watching it, I want to end it early. Is the ps buddhist pagoda shot in real scene? Although it is shocking, it feels strange to accompany the cg. The scenes seem to be real or fake.

  • Chance 2022-03-30 09:01:08

    Very good apocalyptic skit. The first class discussion was about philosophy, and the remaining three escapes were basically discussions on human nature, which had nothing to do with philosophy. However, perhaps, human nature is actually the biggest and ultimate problem of philosophy. . .

After the Dark quotes

  • Utami: [singing] Lenten ys come with love to toune / with blosmen ant with briddes roune / that al this blisse bryngeth;/ Dayes-eyes in this dales / notes suete of nyhtegales / uch foul song singeth./ The threstelcoc him threteth oo / away is huere wynter wo / when woderove springeth;/ This foules singeth ferly fele / ant wlyteth on huere wynne wele / that al the wode ryngeth.

  • [Mr. Zimit just announced to the class that they'll conduct a final big thought experiment, about survival during a global cataclysm]

    Chips: But what kind of cataclysm are we talking about? Gamma ray burst? Pandemic? Erupting super volcano? A sudden shift in the Earth's axis rotation? Grey goo?

    Mr. Zimit: Hang on, Chips, we'll get there.

    Chips: But is it biological? Geological? Thermo-nuclear? Meteorological?

    Mr. Zimit: Let's go old school. Say... atomic.