Potential spoiler warning for a fifty plus year-old novella...
Recently I finished my first read-through of the classic sci-fi novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by Phillip K. Dick. It is best known for being the inspiration for the Blade Runner films. In a funny coincidence, a good friend recommended the book about six months ago to me, and that same week I ran The Big Hoodoo in Trail of Cthulhu as a one-shot, which features Phil Dick and other famous sci-fi authors in the adventure (unfortunately I enjoyed that adventure less than this book). There will be mild spoilers for the novel.
A few thoughts struck me about the book:
- Dick’s prose is beautiful, particularly in the description of transcendence and the emotional landscapes he paints, such as chapter two’s description of the empathy box collective experience.
- The mood dialer devices are an analogue for the measures we take to drown out our emotions.
- The fear of the silence from Isidore. We are surrounded by a cacophony of voices and an unending onslaught of events. Even in our private moments we seek to escape the silence by escaping through a screen, or an endless Spotify track.
- A focus on the emotional and empathetic responses of humans, and perhaps the core argument that apathy and inability to empathize is a symptom of psychological problems. Perhaps even more, acts of violence are, like in our normal social relationship, considered highly taboo. Yet our media, stories, and games often have a significant focus on violence in one form or another.
