The Mote in God's Eye: Difference between revisions

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* [[Hyperspace Lanes]]: Alderson points. The one in the Mote leads into a red supergiant.
* [[I Resemble That Remark]]: The [[Shout-Out|Scottish]] [[Star Trek: The Original Series|engineer]], when the first officer complains about his accent.
{{quote| '''Jack Cargill:''' Will you stop talking like that? You talk just like everyone else when you get angry!<br />
'''Jock Sinclair:''' [[Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping|THAT'S A DAMNED LIE!]] }}
* [[Immortal Procreation Clause]]: Inverted. {{spoiler|If the Moties don't get pregnant ''and give birth'', they die young, and horribly.}}
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* [[Starfish Aliens]]: The Moties are a species that has deliberately evolved into multiple castes, all of which look odd by Earth standards, mostly because they're non-symmetrical. Moties are described as looking something like a bipedal dog with two small, limber arms on one side and one strong, thick arm on the other.
* [[Stern Chase]]: The second half of ''The Gripping Hand'' consists of a series of trips in various directions by the protagonists, to escape being killed or to buy time until the cavalry can arrive.
{{quote| "If someone tells me that 'a stern chase is a long chase' one more time." Joyce said, "I'll scream."}}
* [[Take a Third Option]]: The Moties have three hands--two dexterous hands and one strong "gripping" hand, the source of the second book's title. This is exemplified in that the phrase "on the one hand...on the other hand..." is often followed by "on the gripping hand" even though humans can't naturally think that way (having only two hands and all). The Gripping Hand option is often one that overrides the other two or makes them irrelevant.
** And yet, despite not having three hands, humans ''always'' look for the Third Option - to the point where the fatalistic Moties, condemned by their biology to two bad choices, consider us all insane for not understanding and accepting what is and must always be. Their term for humans is "Crazy Eddie", after a character in their folklore who's all about the (often absurd) Third Option.