I'm merely saying that the gist of the OP's quote isn't that good.
I'm sorry it frightened you.
I'm reading the novel right now to see if I missed something contextual. It apparently has vampires as a SF concept. So I like it already (I like things that don't take themselves seriously).
The vampires are completely serious, played totally straight and hard, and a critical part of the book's thesis.
But yeah, if you're easily scared by the cold vastness of the universe and by the ramifications of some branchings of game theory, it will not go well.
It's annoying, and you sort of wonder he bothered.
I can think of a few reasons. Bakker's made it his mission to present this sort of argument to the masses--although I'm not sure fat fantasy novels are really the correct medium for popularizing any argument, but nevermind.
Bakker ****ing rocks, amazing mother****er, but Neuropath was a total failure, a dud, an abortion. He better stick to the fat fantasy.
Anyway, the reason it's important to think about things like this is because they may help us prepare for and understand alien life and strategies to deal with it. Or to avoid scenarios like the one
hinted at by the end of Blindsight.
I'm not sure how that's antithetical to any kind of activity.