Science Fiction, Mystery, Thriller, Gothic Horror, and some japanese fiction.
Thursday, 31 December 2020
Tuesday, 29 December 2020
The Coming Technological Singularity: How to Survive in the Post-Human Era by Vernor Vinge (1993)
I first read about Singularities in Wonders of the Universe (Cox) and then The Illustrated A Brief History of Time (Hawking), referring to the Bing Bang and Black Holes. In those points/places mathematical calculations reach divisions by zero, or infinite, meaning the rules of (known) physics do not apply. Recently I also read a novel called Diaspora by Greg Egan in which characters travel through Singularities (totallyrecommendit. ).
The topic of Vinge's essay is different from the above. It discusses our future after we develop super human intelligence. This is a well-known essay, as it is in this paper (as far as I know) that Vinge coined the term (Technological) Singularity to mean that point in which we, humans will cease to be the most intelligent things on earth. Previously I had read a thesis on Singularities and literature and recently a much recommended Life 3.0 by Max Tegmark which opened my mind to so many possibilities. Also the last novel I read was Accelerando by Charles Stross, difficult read but worth it. Among other things it explores the effects of a Technological Singularity on economics and humanity way of living.
Thursday, 24 December 2020
Tuesday, 22 December 2020
New Scientist. Essential Guide N °4. Our Human Story. How one species walked upright and conquered the world.
Super Interesting Read. I loved it. My favourite chapter is Chapter 4: What makes us human. And my favourite article in that chapter has to be The Cave Art Code. Which discusses early signs of writing left with paintings. It looks into Gnevieve von Petzinger's (a canadian paleoanthropologist) study of cave art around the world. She identified a series of symbols repeated across several sites around the world. The similarities so evident she thinks they might be more than scratches. See photo 10. By the way von Petzinger published a book titled The first signs: Unlocking the mysteries of the world's oldest symbols. I'm tempted to get it now.
Saturday, 19 December 2020
Accelerando by Charles Stross
I found this to be a very dense, layered novel. Not that the writing is complicated but that is charged with numerous concepts, plus the story is complex. There is Artificial Intelligence, Singularity, Transhumans, Posthumans (they are called the evil offspring, not sure how they evolved). Also through time, humans are able to upload their consciousness on simulated realities, or keep copies so they could be resurrected in new bodies. Because consciousness are now software, very much transportable and not dependable on meat bodies, people are able to do incredible things with themselves. For example forking, that's, creating multiple copies of themselves, which could become independent individuals or could synchronise back again into the original.
If the above wasn't enough, humans, are able to travel vast distances and meet other species and the technologies they leave around. I found, one of them, the Matrioshka brains super intrensting. Russian doll Dyson spheres the size of solar systems.
Two aspects of the story I couldn't follow much were the economic and legal aspects. The book criticises capitalism and dwells into legal terminology that lost me. One thing I understood and liked though was the idea of changing the Intellectual Property/Copyright paradigm towards AI, to Civil Rights perspective. The idea is further developed to include aliens.




