tinyjo: (Default)
I've been reading Nialls posts about Accelerando and have come to an important realisation. These are stories I am not interested in. They're not stories about people and that's what I'm interested in. Telling stories which tells me something about people.

In a not entirely unrelated note, I re-watched A Few Good Men last night and noticed for the first time that it was written by Aaron Sorkin (the writer of the West Wing). Which, although unknown, was entirely unsurprising. The passion of the characters, the clear treatment of moral issues, acknowledging the ambiguities, and above all the rhetoric. It should have been obvious.

Date: June 15th, 2005 05:19 pm (UTC)From: [identity profile] coalescent.livejournal.com
Depends what you count as 'human'. One of the book's big points is that 'posthuman' is a bit of a misnomer--there's no sharp line between this kind of intelligence and that kind of intelligence, it's all a continuum. At the high-end are the godlike AIs who move in mysterious ways, but none of the characters reach that kind of level. They may exist in multiple copies but they're still human--more so than in many other novels of this type, because you've seen the intermediate steps, as it were.

Again, characterisation is not the novel's strength, but the people are more recognisable than those in, say, a Greg Egan novel (I'm thinking of Disaspora in particular here).

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tinyjo: (Default)
Emptied of expectation. Relax.

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