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August 19, 2007

Book Review: Accelerando, Singularity Sky and Iron Sunrise by Charles Stross by Charles Stross

These three books are all pretty interesting. If you haven't read Accelerando, you certainly need to. For those that don't know, these books all feature the technological singularity as a primary plot element. The technological singularity is the point at once artificial intelligence surpasses man's own intelligence, and continues to increase at an exponential rate, leading to machine intelligence so rapidly and so vastly exceeding our own intelligence that we can hardly begin to imagine the changes that result. Ray Kurzweil has written extensively about the singularity, including his own book The Singularity is Near, which I highly recommend.


Charles Stross brings those concepts to life in his books. Once you've read his books, it will profoundly change the way you perceive science-fiction. Since then, every sci-fi book I've read feels a little less believable - they frequently take place in what would appear to be hundreds of years in the future, and yet technology, and especially artificial intelligence, has hardly progressed at all. That's just laughable once you've read The Singularity is Near and Accelerando.


So please read them, because they are fantastic books. But prepare to be changed.

May 1, 2007

Book Review: Sixty Days and Counting by Kim Stanley Robinson

I've previously written about Kim Stanley Robinson's excellent science fiction novels that incorporate environmental themes. Well his latest novel, Sixty Days and Counting, is absolutely outstanding. In it, he continues the story started in Forty Days of Rain and Fifty Degrees Below about abrupt climate change. But in Sixty Days, we move beyond the abrupt climate change event itself and into the realm of political and cultural change, technical solutions and global environmental mitigation.

This is a book that is entirely about creating a positive future vision. It's about imaging what is possible if we were all working together really address the social and environmental crisis all around us. Having been interested in, and actively studying environmental issues for about ten years, and having studied sustainable business practices in the MBA program at Bainbridge Graduate Institute, I have a respect for the complexity of environmental and social issues: it's usually not as simple as banning this or that, or engaging in confrontations with big corporations. We can't, for example, look at logging as solely an environmental issue when it is also an issue of wasteful business practices, personal choice, and worker's jobs.

It feels as though Kim Stanley Robinson has been reading all the same books I have, been in the same book groups, taken the same sustainable business MBA classes, studied systems thinking extensively. Sixty Days and counting seems to tackle so much - so many issues, the political aspect, the business aspect, the cultural impacts, local impacts, global impacts. It's hard to imagine what someone would make of this book who didn't have the same background. It is even possible to grasp all the incredible concepts on this book? Reading the reviews on Amazon, people definitely do have strong opinions on the book.

Some of my favorite parts of the book are U.S. President Phil Chase's blog posts. Here's one long example, from page 361:

I think for a while we forgot what was possible. Our way of life damaged our ability to imagine anything different. Maybe we are rarely good at imaging that things could be different. Maybe that's what we mean when we talk about the Enlightenment. For a while there we understood that the ultimate source of power is the imagination.

"Through new uses of corporations, banks and securities, new machinery of industry, of labor and capital - all undreamed of by the Fathers - the whole structure of modern life was impressed into the service of
economic royalists. It was natural and perhaps human that the priviledges princes of these new economic dynastics, thirsting for power, reached out for control of government itself. In its service new mercenaries sought to regiment the people, their labor and their property. And as a result the average man once more confronts the problem that faced the Minute Man. For too many of us life was no longer free; liberty no longer real; men could no longer follow the pursuit of happines. Against economic tyranny such as this, the American citizen could only appeal to the organized power of the Government."

That was Franklin Roosevelt, talking as president to the nation 1936. In the same speech he said, "There is a mysterious cycle in human events. To some generations much is given. Of other generations much is expected. This generation of Americans has a rendezvous with destiny."

But then we forgot again. We went back to imagining that things could only be as they were. We lived on in that strange new feudalism, in ways that were unjust and destructive and yet were presented as the only possible reality. We said "people are like that," or "human nature will never change" or "we are all guilty of original sin," or this is democracy, this is the free market, this is reality itself." And we went along with that analysis, and it became the law of the land. The entire world was legally bound to accept this feudal injustice as law. It was global and so it looked like it was universal. The future itself was bought, in the form of debts, mortgages, contracts - all spelled out by law and enforced by police and armies. Alternatives were unthinkable. Even to say that things could be otherwise would get you immediately branded as unrealistic, foolish, naive, insane, utopian.

But that was all delusion. Every few years things change completely, even though we can't quite remember how it happend or what it means. Change is real and unavoidable. And we can organization our affairs any way we please. There is no physical restraint on us. We are free to act. It's a fearsome thing, this freedom, so much so that people talk about a "flight from freedom" - that we fly into cages and hide because freedom is so profound it's a kind of abyss. To actually choose in each moment how to live is too scary to ensure.

So we lived like sleepwalkers. But the world is not asleep, and outside our dream, things continued to change. Trying to shape that change is not a bad thing. Some present that making a plan is instant communism and the devil's work, but it isn't so. We always have a plan. Free market economics is a plan-it plans to give over all decisions to the blind hand of the market. But the blind hand never picks up the check. And, you know-it's blind. To deal with the global environmental crisis now without making any more plan than to trust the market would be like saving, We have to solve this problem so first let's put out our eyes. Why? Why not use our eyes? Why not use our brain?

Because we're going to have to imagine our way out of this one.


Highly recommended!

January 31, 2007

Book Review: Forty Signs of Rain and Fifty Degrees Below by Kim Stanley Robinson

The more I read of Kim Stanley Robinson, the more I like his books. Forty Signs of Rain and Fifty Degrees Below are the first two books in a eco-thriller trilogy on abrupt climate change. As usual, there's lots of great science in his books - in fact, outside of my environmental and socially responsible MBA program (BGI), I've never read about as many different ecological and sustainability principles in one place as I have in reading Kim Stanely Robinson's books.

Forty Signs of Rain is the much slower paced of the two books. In it, there is a gradual buildup of events and character development until the weather event described by the title comes to pass in the final quarter of the book. Then the pace picks up substantially. The book takes place in the geographical and political backdrop of Washington D.C.

Fifty Degrees Below is a fast paced thriller through and through. Though all of the characters from the first book make appearances, much of the story revolves around a single character - a disc golf playing scientist who spends much of his time relating the human behavior he sees back to the evolutionary basis for that behavior. I can indentify with this character, since I love relating the human behavior I see back to the tribal cultural basis for that behavior. This is a very highly enjoyable book.

I actually read Fifty Degrees Below first, and had I not known what was coming, I might have been slightly put off by the slow pacing of the first book. So if you happen to pick up these books and finding Forty Days of Rain slow going, just put it aside, read the second book, and then go back.

April 17, 2006

Book Review: Pandora's Star and Judas Unchained by Peter F. Hamilton

Pandora's Star and Judas Unchained are part one and part two of a single story. And what a story it is.

Richard Morgan, writing about Judas Unchained says, "flat-out huge widescreen all-engine-at-full I-dare-you-not-to-believe-it space operate", and I have to agree. Without a doubt, this is the most thrilling humans-meet-aliens book I've read. Though your head may be reeling from the massive list of characters mid-way through the first book, by the end of the first book and throughout the second you'll really be hitting your stride as you are fully immersed in the Commonwealth's universe. The story is audacious in scope and storyline.

I wrote earlier about Pandora's Star: "Great sci-fi novel set in future mankind space exploration and settlement age using “wormholes” that allow instantaneous travel between two places. The story encompasses an encounter with a “Dyson’s Pair” of stars that are suddenly cut off from the universe. Who did it, and why?" I won't say more, because there is a great deal of suspense in the book about what will happen next. After rereading my notes about Pandora's Star, I realized I gave that book a "4 out of 5" rating. But Judas Unchained definitely rates a "5 out of 5" (maybe even 5.5 out of 5) rating.

Pandora's Star: Buy at Amazon or Place hold at Multnomah County Library
Judas Unchained: Buy at Amazon or Place hold at Multnomah County Library

April 3, 2006

Book Review: Seeker by Jack McDevitt

Imagine a main character somewhere between a female Indiana Jones and a female Sherlock Holmes, in a detective novel about an anthropologist/treasure hunter hot on the trail of a lost civilization, set 9,000 years in the future. That's Seeker, by Jack McDevitt. I tore threw it over a couple of nights of burping babies. It manages to have both a relaxed pace as well as a page turning adventure flavor at the same time. Skillful writing, a great story, and interesting characters. 4 out of 5. Buy at Amazon or Place hold at Multnomah County Library