But stable solutions are what the Trisolarans want to escape to, so while they're not how you become Trisolarans, they're definitely a way to be targeted by them.
Edit: While we're discussing the Remembrance of Earth's Past series, there are few books I have more mixed feelings about. On the one hand, it had many fascinating ideas. While trying to avoid spoilers, the dark forest theorem is far too plausible, the Swordholder gambit is well done, the first encounter with the Trisolaran teardrop probe was really well done, the 2D weapon was legitimately terrifying, the curvature drives' effect on spacetime was a nice twist, I could go on. On the other hand there were a lot of things that just didn't gel. The apathy of the humans after the end of the Deterrence Era, a lot of human reactions to events (could just be cultural though?) and why does the sun have a crust?! Argh.
Edit: While we're discussing the Remembrance of Earth's Past series, there are few books I have more mixed feelings about. On the one hand, it had many fascinating ideas. While trying to avoid spoilers, the dark forest theorem is far too plausible, the Swordholder gambit is well done, the first encounter with the Trisolaran teardrop probe was really well done, the 2D weapon was legitimately terrifying, the curvature drives' effect on spacetime was a nice twist, I could go on. On the other hand there were a lot of things that just didn't gel. The apathy of the humans after the end of the Deterrence Era, a lot of human reactions to events (could just be cultural though?) and why does the sun have a crust?! Argh.