Cylon Religion: Difference between revisions
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#A creature appearing to Baltar as a copy of Number Six, who claims to be an "Angel of God". | #A creature appearing to Baltar as a copy of Number Six, who claims to be an "Angel of God". | ||
Each of these should be taken with a considerable grain of salt. The first two are probably the most trustworthy. Conoy frequently mixes truth and lies, and his statements tend to be fairly ambiguous anyway. The "Angel of God" nature has not yet been clearly elucidated, and she has disclaimed direct allegiance with Cylons at least once. | Each of these should be taken with a considerable grain of salt. The first two are probably the most trustworthy. Conoy frequently mixes truth and lies, and his statements tend to be fairly ambiguous anyway. The "Angel of God" nature has not yet been clearly elucidated, and she has disclaimed direct allegiance with Cylons at least once. The first mention of the cylon religion came during the first sex scene with [[Number Six]] and [[Gaius Baltar]] in the [[Miniseries]] when Six said "Oh God" while her spine glowed a mellow cylon red. | ||
==Attitude toward other faiths== | ==Attitude toward other faiths== |
Revision as of 07:24, 16 March 2006
Template:Cylons Series Cylons follow a monotheistic religion, of their own devising, distinct from the polytheistic religion of their human creators (Miniseries).
Sources
Our knowledge of Cylon beliefs comes from four principle sources:
- A copy of Number Six engaged in an affair with Gaius Baltar who was killed on the day of the Cylon Attack
- The Caprica copy of Sharon Valerii
- Two copies of Leoben Conoy, found on Ragnar Anchorage and the Gemenon Traveler
- A creature appearing to Baltar as a copy of Number Six, who claims to be an "Angel of God".
Each of these should be taken with a considerable grain of salt. The first two are probably the most trustworthy. Conoy frequently mixes truth and lies, and his statements tend to be fairly ambiguous anyway. The "Angel of God" nature has not yet been clearly elucidated, and she has disclaimed direct allegiance with Cylons at least once. The first mention of the cylon religion came during the first sex scene with Number Six and Gaius Baltar in the Miniseries when Six said "Oh God" while her spine glowed a mellow cylon red.
Attitude toward other faiths
Cylons view the worship of multiple gods as blasphemeous against their God (Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part I). The Cylons seem to know the scriptures of the human religion very well, but do not believe them to be literally true (Home, Part I). They acknowlege the historicity of the Lords of Kobol without accepting their divinity.
Beliefs
It seems that they worship a supernatural being beyond creation, something that wishes for all to believe in it and love it, human and Cylon alike. The Cylon religion includes concepts of "sin". For example, Number Six warned Baltar that suicide was a mortal sin when he jokingly suggested killing himself ("Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down"), and the tortured Number Six copy named Gina did not kill herself to escape horrific torture because she believed that suicide is a sin ("Resurrection Ship, Part II").
The Cylons maintain that one of God's Commandments is to procreate ("be fruitful"), but the humanoid Cylons are incapable of procreating with each other. The Cylons apparently strictly define "procreation" as biological reproduction, and not creation of copies of existing Cylon models using asexual, industrial or laboratory techniques. As a result, the Cylons began attempts to create a Cylon-Human Hybrid (deemed more feasible than their previous attempts at procreation amongst their own kind). To this end they developed the Farms on the occupied Twelve Colonies to create a hybrid, but these attempts ended in failure.
The first successful Cylon-Human Hybrid, Hera, the daughter of the Caprica copy of Sharon Vallerii and Lt. Karl "Helo" Agathon, is literally considered to be a "miracle from God" by the Cylons ("Final Cut").