2011-03-26, 08:34 | Link #122 |
別にいいけど
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: forever lost inside a logic error
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I'm with Naikou on this one, I don't see any particular reason as to why a mystery novel should only focus on the mystery without any side dish.
Actually there's a lot of stuff I don't agree with Dine. I also find ironic how his rules forbid servants as the culprits (because the culprit must be a worth-while person) but there is no explicit prohibition about animals and children as culprits.
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2011-03-27, 02:42 | Link #126 |
Slashy Slashy!
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: USA
Age: 34
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Sounds like Detective Kun-Kun.
Technically speaking, the very first detective mystery did have an animal as the culprit. Spoiler:
So maybe that's why Van Dine didn't feel inclined to ban animals from being culprits. |
2011-03-27, 07:43 | Link #128 |
別にいいけど
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: forever lost inside a logic error
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I don't remember that, but Eva preemptively denied animals in her red truth web. That's the only time that the idea of trained animals as the mean to commit murder was suggested in Umineko (that I know of).
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2011-03-27, 17:16 | Link #130 | ||
Mystery buff
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Gone Fishin!
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Quote:
Quote:
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2011-03-28, 14:10 | Link #132 |
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Join Date: May 2009
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Animals were passively mentioned several times in Umineko, notably the "wolf legend" of the forest having wolves even though it didn't. Otherwise there's the seagulls. I guess Eva was just covering bases there.
However, when an animal kills, I have to assume there's some human agency behind it. An animal is not capable of criminal ideation to rise to the level of a "culprit." An animal trained by a person to kill? Sure, that's murder, but the animal is little more than a murder weapon, not a complicit culprit. Animal kills on its own? That's not murder, that's an accident.
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2011-03-28, 14:57 | Link #133 |
Slashy Slashy!
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: USA
Age: 34
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The best possible ending to Umineko would be "The seagulls did it." It was revenge against the evil chef Gohda, who was boiling seagulls alive in order to enhance their flavor.
But yeah, I'd have to agree - "murder" is a legal term, and it's defined the same pretty much everywhere as "The intentional killing of a human by another human". So even a really intelligent animal (smarter than a human, even), would not be capable of murder as currently defined. That said, accidents aren't necessarily prohibited in mystery, though Van Dine doesn't like them. Maybe Van Dine figured animal killings were covered under his accident clause. |
2011-03-28, 15:43 | Link #134 |
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Join Date: May 2009
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Well, I'd accept say a genetically modified gorilla with human-like intellect as a "culprit" capable of committing murder. Same with an alien, or a robot. Indeed, Asimov's robot mysteries (The Caves of Steel / The Naked Sun / The Robots of Dawn) were all about whether a robot, programmed with essentially sub-human intellect and severely restricted capacity to do harm, could nevertheless commit a murder. The answer, of course, was usually no...
Spoiler for Asimov's Robot Mysteries:
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2011-03-28, 16:02 | Link #135 |
Slashy Slashy!
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: USA
Age: 34
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Asimov is one of my favorites for his Foundation series, but unfortunately I haven't read any of his mysteries, so I'll have to refrain from clicking that spoiler.
I do think that if we discovered some non-human entity with greater than or equal intelligence to humans, we'd have to reconsider the concept of murder, but as it stands now it is well defined. If someone built an intelligent killer robot today, nearly every culture in the world would convict the person who built the robot, not the robot itself, even if the robot displayed greater than human intelligence. And perhaps that makes some sense! Part of the problem is that "intelligence" is not quantifiable, at least not yet. IQ scores are silly, and laughed at by psychologists. And we have reached the point where there are some super-computers with greater memory capacity than the human brain (computers passed humans in terms of processing speed long ago - our chemical-based computer-minds can't possibly keep up). So how can we test whether something is "intelligent" enough to commit murder? To bring some semblance of on-topicness to this post: 1. Only humans can commit murder 2. The culprit is defined as one who commits murder 3. Beatrice is not human 4. Therefore, Beatrice is not the culprit 5. Therefore, Battler wins by definition of murder |
2011-03-28, 16:47 | Link #137 |
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You should give them a try; they're neat mysteries and they work well with the puzzles Asimov set up with his Three Laws in I, Robot (which is not itself a mystery). Of course they're distinctly sci-fi, but they rely on solutions that follow from the world in which the characters live. You have to accept that this includes robots and that positronic brains used by robots have peculiar capabilities, but it doesn't break its own rules.
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2011-03-28, 17:11 | Link #139 |
別にいいけど
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: forever lost inside a logic error
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I don't agree at all that an animal killing a man (or another animal) can be considered an "accident". Just because they do not possess the intellect of humans it doesn't mean that they totally lack a "will" and "ideation".
All mammal predators and birds possess enough brain potential to preplan their attacks, the only thing that they lack is the ability to comprehend abstract concepts like morality. This innate competence also grants them the power to kill other beings for reasons different from feeding necessities for example out of rage or for territorial defense. Also this isn't a matter of raw intelligence it's a matter of cognitive competence. What is required for a being to be considered a killer is a "will" not "intelligence". You could technically have a supercomputer capable of solving incredible problems, but as long as it lacks a will it can't be considered a culprit. Even if it was programmed to kill someone, that wouldn't be much different from a timed bomb. The programmer would be the killer. The same thing goes for trained animals. If they kill under someone's order it isn't their "will". "Will" is what defines the killer, not intelligence.
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