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Editing Podcast:Torn

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RDM: It's closer to what he sees, and we're gonna touch on that again [[Season 3 (2006-07)|this season]] with [[Caprica-Six]] and the [[Cylon-Related_Hallucinations#Six.27s Internal Baltar|Baltar in her head]] and there's a larger ideas of why those two characters keep seeing these imaginary people and there's a suggestion that perhaps those imaginary beings are linked on some level, that we might get to explore at some later date. It's all still up in the air for a lot of discussion of what that means and is there a real connection or is it a completely separate idea.
RDM: It's closer to what he sees, and we're gonna touch on that again [[Season 3 (2006-07)|this season]] with [[Caprica-Six]] and the [[Cylon-Related_Hallucinations#Six.27s Internal Baltar|Baltar in her head]] and there's a larger ideas of why those two characters keep seeing these imaginary people and there's a suggestion that perhaps those imaginary beings are linked on some level, that we might get to explore at some later date. It's all still up in the air for a lot of discussion of what that means and is there a real connection or is it a completely separate idea.


Student: [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]] are aware of the fact that they were created by humans. How do they- what sort of [[Cylon Religion|religious creation myths]] do they allow themselves?
Student: [[Cylons (RDM)|Cylons]] are aware of the fact that they were created by humans. How do they- what sort of religious creation myths do they allow themselves?


RDM: What the Cylons believe is that [[God (RDM)|God]] creat- God, singular, there is a singular God that created mankind. Mankind is a flawed creation. Sinned. Has essentially thrown away the gift of the soul and of God's love. God then had man create the Cylons as a more perfect entity. And now the Cylons are supposed to take the place of the flawed humans in the cosmos and essentially are the next generation. When I was- in the [[miniseries]], I talked a lot about how the Cylons saw themselves as mankind's children and that there was a line somewhere that, essentially, "Children can't become really, truly adults until their parents are dead." And so the Cylons had to kill their parents in order to evolve and mature. And that was their philosophical world view. But they felt that they were- God is love, and that they were in the service of a loving, compassionate God that offered redemption and so on.
RDM: What the Cylons believe is that [[God (RDM)|God]] creat- God, singular, there is a singular God that created mankind. Mankind is a flawed creation. Sinned. Has essentially thrown away the gift of the soul and of God's love. God then had man create the Cylons as a more perfect entity. And now the Cylons are supposed to take the place of the flawed humans in the cosmos and essentially are the next generation. When I was- in the [[miniseries]], I talked a lot about how the Cylons saw themselves as mankind's children and that there was a line somewhere that, essentially, "Children can't become really, truly adults until their parents are dead." And so the Cylons had to kill their parents in order to evolve and mature. And that was their philosophical world view. But they felt that they were- God is love, and that they were in the service of a loving, compassionate God that offered redemption and so on.
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RDM: It's a riff on a lot of those different ideas. I mean, you can go all the way b- even [[w:Frankenstein|''Frankenstein'']] on some level is about this story and the idea of mankind's creation then turning back on itself is an old idea in science fiction. So what we tend to do is we embrace that as, "Ok. This is our history. This story has been told in many different forms and different ways." I'd say the closest analogies to the Cylons are the [[w:Replicant|Replicants]] in [[w:Blade Runner|''Blade Runner'']]. In ''Blade Runner'', and we talked about that a lot at the time, the Replicants, the [[w:Rutger Hauer|Rutger Hauer]] [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Roy_Batty|character]] and [[w:Daryl Hannah|Daryl Hannah]]'s [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Pris|character]] and [[w:Sean Young|Sean Young]]'s [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Rachael|character]], there's something very human about them, and very touching, and very emotional. And Rutger Hauer is metaphysical and he looks and is trying to see things in a larger light, and he's poetic at certain points. And they're gripped by their own mortality and they're struggling to find their creator. And I was moved and touched by that and I thought that's an interesting place to start the conversation about who the Cylons are.
RDM: It's a riff on a lot of those different ideas. I mean, you can go all the way b- even [[w:Frankenstein|''Frankenstein'']] on some level is about this story and the idea of mankind's creation then turning back on itself is an old idea in science fiction. So what we tend to do is we embrace that as, "Ok. This is our history. This story has been told in many different forms and different ways." I'd say the closest analogies to the Cylons are the [[w:Replicant|Replicants]] in [[w:Blade Runner|''Blade Runner'']]. In ''Blade Runner'', and we talked about that a lot at the time, the Replicants, the [[w:Rutger Hauer|Rutger Hauer]] [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Roy_Batty|character]] and [[w:Daryl Hannah|Daryl Hannah]]'s [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Pris|character]] and [[w:Sean Young|Sean Young]]'s [[w:List_of_minor_characters_in_Blade_Runner#Rachael|character]], there's something very human about them, and very touching, and very emotional. And Rutger Hauer is metaphysical and he looks and is trying to see things in a larger light, and he's poetic at certain points. And they're gripped by their own mortality and they're struggling to find their creator. And I was moved and touched by that and I thought that's an interesting place to start the conversation about who the Cylons are.
== Act 3 ==
== Act 3 ==
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