gorobei
Diamond Member
- Jan 7, 2007
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the mycelium is a bit of a conceit, very inline with original showrunner Brian Fuller(he did a mushroom episode on Hannibal). fungal colonies are the largest living organisms on the planet (identifiably discrete dna). there were some other studies indicating awareness of conditions over vast distances in different parts the fungus, similar to quantum entanglement. extending the concept gets you an organism with cosmic connectivity/consciousness. the using it to travel is the leap. when i saw the scene with Stammits(seeming named after a real mycologist) and his mini sermon on fungi, i knew what they were hinting at and that average viewers werent going to have the fringe knowledge to make the connections.The only possible way I can justify that bs is if it was just a bogus cover story to get Michael to go along with Lorca's plan which really is some sort of bioweapon. That makes infinitely more sense. He saw that she wasn't going to take the bait so he pivoted and made up some bs story to rope her in. The only problem with that is that you had that science geek going on and on in the shuttle about filaments connecting all of space. So if you go with that explanation, you're being more than generous.
Putting that issue aside, I actually liked the episode. I didn't find the electricity eating bugs too over the top since such creatures do exist. OK, they use electricity to metabolize minerals but they do live on pure electricity (https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25894-meet-the-electric-life-forms-that-live-on-pure-energy/). Of course what they were doing floating around in empty space is another problem but . . . well . . . f*** it.
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tardigrades can survive in space, assuming something similar developed the ability to feed on cosmic radiation it isnt a huge leap.