T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
166.1 | | KATADN::BOTTOM | | Thu Jan 10 1985 20:08 | 9 |
| You should read the trilogy he wrote: Inherit the Stars
The Gentle Giants of Gyanmede (sp?)
Giant's Star
The first is probably the best but you should read the rest to finish the
story.
*db*
|
166.2 | | WHERE::GREENE | | Fri Jan 11 1985 07:51 | 11 |
| I know what you mean about the characterizations that don't "sit well". The
usual english lit description would be "flat" or "cardboard" characters. This
is true of all the characters in "the two faces of tomorrow". I think there
are two recognizable facets of that:
. the characters lack details of personality: visualizations of
their persons, emotions, thoughts aren't there
. the characters lack common sense: I refer to the ending, where
anybody with common sense would nuke the sucker! Read the ending,
and see if you agree.
Woody Greene
|
166.3 | | PHOBOS::WICKERT | | Fri Jan 11 1985 14:32 | 9 |
| What does everyone think of "Code of the Lifemaker"? All of Hogan's other
books have kept me for the entire book and then some... but this one I just
cannot get through... beginning is ok, but bogged down somewhere in the
middle... the entire setting is driven by what happens when an Artificial
Intelligence program get a bug in it and it decides that "evolution" is the
logical thing to start in a Robot.
Regards,
Dave
|
166.4 | | NY1MM::SWEENEY | | Fri Jan 11 1985 22:43 | 10 |
| Dave, read "Code of the Lifemaker" all the way through. It gets better.
James Hogan left DEC a few years ago. It's funny, but he was more prolific
when he worked here at DEC.
He characters are weak, but that's more than offset by the way he puts all that
science into the science fiction. "The Genesis Machine" was his first novel, I
don't think that was listed in the previous replies.
Pat Sweeney
|
166.5 | | HELOS::MALIK | | Mon Jan 14 1985 15:57 | 28 |
| Re; localized consciousness
Pick up a copy of 'The Mind's I' by Dennet and Hofstaedter. It's
a collection of essays (stories, etc.) about the nature of consciousness.
One essay 'Where am I' addresses the very question you pose about
computer nets, except that it suggests our consciousness is already
non-localized.
He tells a tale about a guy who gets in an accident; they save
his brain, build him a robot body, but keep the brain at the lab. The
body is controlled by radio waves. The author says he feels like he
is 'in back of his eyes' but knows he's back at the lab.
He then speculates about the consequences of having the right
hemisphere someplace and the left somewhere else ( again with every
normal connection transmitting an rf signal to a reciever on the other
side ). Location becomes more confused.
Lastly, he envisions each individual neuron having it's own
transmitter and reciever. At that point, they could be spread around
any space ( possibly miles apart ) without disturbing one's sense of
'placement'.
A well written, far more entertaining than my above description,
thought experiment that does provoke some serious thoughts.
- Karl
|
166.6 | "Lifemaker" | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Apr 25 1986 18:19 | 20 |
| Re 236.99
If there is an element of caricature in my statement of his themes,
it may be I have misunderstood him, but it may also be that I have
simply distilled something spread diffusely through the novel.
No, I don't particularly admit that the relations of science and
religion during the Middle Ages resemble Hogan's caricature. (I
would, by the way, claim that the period being parodied is the
Renaisaance, not the Middle Ages, but that's a trifle.) Copernicus
was himself a cleric, and was urged to publish by clerics. He refused
not for fear of the church, but for fear of the established
universities. Galileo was defended as well as prosecuted by clerics.
Immediately after his trial, a cardinal flouted the orders of the
Inquisition and made Galileo his guest, introducing him to a long
list of scholars and celebrities, when the Inquisition had decreed
he should be isolated. The church has been pig-headed, but never
THAT pig-headed.
Earl Wajenberg
|
166.7 | untenable analogy | CLT::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Mon Apr 28 1986 13:32 | 19 |
| On the other hand, from all the history I recall, Galileo
*was* excommunicated for daring to advance science, and it
was in fact relatively recently that the church decided maybe
he was OK after all.
Real life religion in fact tends to be *exactly* like the
religion portrayed in *Lifemaker*, and to some extent the
story was an effective criticism-through-parody. It fell
down, for me, simply because it wasn't a very good or original
story, after the first few pages. there just seemed to be
too many forced, unnatural, and untennable parallels between
their society and ours. I have the same objection to some
of Piers Anthony's "Bio of a Space Tyrant" series...
particularly the bit about the whistlestop tour over the
states of North Jupiter (the states of "Sunshine", "Show
Me", etc.), was just too much to swallow. Lifemaker gave
me many of the same sensations.
/dave
|
166.8 | You're Probably Right but I don't Care. | ERLANG::FEHSKENS | | Thu May 01 1986 14:38 | 18 |
| Well, I don't know enough history well enough to comment intelligently
on this subject, and having already shot my mouth off I respectfully
decline the opportunity to dig myself in deeper (if you'll pardon
my mixed metaphors). Perhaps Hogan is as guilty as I (and /dave?)
of drawing a parody based on misconceptions. It's certainly not
the case that ALL religious devotees are religious out of "ignorance",
and Hogan does seem to strongly imply that. His characters ARE
overdrawn (as I mentioned before, he makes all his military types
look like total jerks), and his implicit philosophy does seem a
little naive (i.e., if we were all rational we'd live together in peace
and harmony forever). Anyway, I don't read Hogan for philosophy
- I have my own, and an SF novel may modify it but it's not likely
to change it much, so I tend to ignore these kinds of issues when
reading SF for enjoyment. It's that "willful suspension of disbelief"
issue again - some of us are willing to suspend more than others.
len.
|
166.9 | OLD BUT THINK ABOUT IT | VIDEO::TEBAY | | Tue Mar 24 1987 12:34 | 13 |
| I realize that this Hogan discussion is over a year old;
however,being new to notes I had to put my two cents in.
I am very suprised that more Digits did not pick up on
Code of the Lifemaker. While Hogan's chracterization has always
been flat this time he fails because of trying{I think}to
extend a parody too far that is obsure to most of his readers.
Reread through some parts of it and than compare to DEC
culture and anti-culture. Also to some of the War Stories
of DEC.
Think about it.
|