I know it's a little early in the day to post it, but I decided to have the thread up and running anyway (probably because I'll be too busy to remember later).
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The picture might have been taken at a funny angle, and it was at a distance. But still, I thought it looked like some sort of flattish disk thingy in that picture last episode rather than a skeleton cathedral. (Maybe it was at a funny enough angle that Caprica Boomer really couldn't recognize it. It seems like she would know about Resurrection Ships, but we don't know how many other kinds of ships the Cylons have. They might have Raider nursery ships for all we know.)Ra wrote: Anyway, was I just looking at it wrong, or did the Cylon Resurrection Ship seen in the last episode (Pegasus) look nothing like what we saw in this ep?
Yeah, I thought the same thing. It actually looked much more like the original Hades-class basestar in a way. Perhaps, because the design is so spindly, it was actually flattened in the first image, and "deployed" later? Anyone got good pics of it from Pegasus (the episode)?Mayabird wrote:The picture might have been taken at a funny angle, and it was at a distance. But still, I thought it looked like some sort of flattish disk thingy in that picture last episode rather than a skeleton cathedral.
Indeed, Gina immediately recognized the design once Starbuck had a closer look, I would think CapBoomer would as well. If it was a bad angle, or an outright bad shot, she indeed wouldn't have recognized it.(Maybe it was at a funny enough angle that Caprica Boomer really couldn't recognize it. It seems like she would know about Resurrection Ships, but we don't know how many other kinds of ships the Cylons have. They might have Raider nursery ships for all we know.)
Agreed. The Cylons, despite wanting to exterminate Humanity, in essence became almost exactly like us. Once sentient Cylons were born they, like us, wondered what was after death, and did everything in their power to prolong their own lives. (Un)Fortunately for them, they accomplished what we can't, immortality, by consciousness-transfer.I'm trying to remember where it was said, but the new Cylons may have made themselves a little too human. I wonder if their realization of their own mortality might have been the basis of their religiousity. The walking chrome toasters might not have enough intelligence to wonder about death, and we know the Raiders have only animal-level intelligence, but when did the new models create their consciousness-transferring technology? Was it before they got themselves emotions, such as the fear of death?
Instead of actually transferring their consciousnesses, they could have simply copied their memory banks before going on a mission, so that their experience would not be lost if something bad happened. If successful, they could copy their new memories afterwards. If unsuccessful, more copies can be made (or the memories could be acquired by other Cylons). Emotionless, without fear of personal death, it would probably be an acceptable arrangement, and also one that does not require additional infrastructure such as the Resurrection Ships which also must be heavily guarded, thus requiring more resources.Ra wrote: I personally think that the Human-forms likely developed this technology right off the bat, as soon as they came "online", if we accept that they have always been sentient (there could have been "prototypes" that were sub-sentient, I suppose).