You are aware that he talks about his "taming of men" theory with respect to homosexuality and marriage, right? I mean, you are the one recommending him, not me. I asked you to share those arguments, especially when it comes to homosexuality. If you want to avoid that, that's your perogative.
In
Wealth and Poverty and
Sexual Suicide, the theme is the breakdown and destruction of traditional gender roles by radical feminism, and the the dislodgement of modern men from civilizing domestic attitudes and responsibilities of marriage and child rearing. The "playboy" womanizer and the generation of young barbarians we have created who do not know how to properly interact with a female unless it involves or leads to sexual activity, has been the result.
As to the electric sheep, you may have the plot point correct, but as usual E, your analysis always ceases as soon as your intellectual training wheels are removed. The question, "do androids dream of electric sheep" is really asking, "what are they?" or, from the android's own perspective, "what, or who, am I?" This is the same ultimate question Rutgar Hauer's replicant character was asking himself in the film adaptation of the book. Man created androids, fully human in appearance, and with what appeared to them to be fully human feelings, emotions, and memories of childhood. When the androids realized that they only had ten years to live, and their memories were fictions, they experienced deep psychological and emotional trauma. And, like other Frankensteins before them, they turned upon their creators.
The question then is, did
man (not God) have the right to create (arrogating to himself the power and prerogatives of God) beings like himself, with all of the capacity to experience feelings, emotions, and an awareness of self, to be no more than functional objects, or tools, useful for work, pleasure, and war? If you can engage that question at a deep philosophical level, then you can see that the electric sheep are symbols of the ultimate question of just what it means to exist as a sentient, self aware being. Is it right for humans to make other, artificial humans to use in this manner? Perhaps if they were un-self aware and zombie-like, having no capacity to ask questions regarding their own existence. But the androids could fall in love, feel hate, and ask, who am I? What do I mean? That's the deeper meaning of the story, and why its relevant to embryonic stem cell research (a dead issue scientifically anyway), and human cloning.
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