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peter

hemminger@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years, 7 months ago

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peter's books

Stopped Reading

Becky Chambers: A Psalm for the Wild-Built (EBook, 2021, Tom Doherty Associates)

It’s been centuries since the robots of Panga gained self-awareness and laid down their tools; …

Gentle, thoughtful, optimistic sci-fi

No rating

If I were able to write fiction, I think this is the kind of fiction I’d like to write. The first book in the Monk & Robot series is gentle and thoughtful, but manages to pick at some anxieties I’ve been having for a long time, about purpose and direction and satisfaction. There’s not much in the way of conflict, but plenty in the way of insight, and it’s short enough that I basically inhaled it.

Even more than the characters, I want to spend more time with the book’s religious system, which is revealed in small details but still largely mysterious by the end of the book. The best fictional religions have a way of concisely showing what’s important in a given world—which I guess real religions do, too, but those are so much more multilayered and convoluted from centuries of revision and interpretation that it takes real scholarship …

reviewed GOD COUNTRY by Donny Cates (GOD COUNTRY, #1)

Donny Cates, Geoff Shaw, John J. Hill, Jason Wordie: GOD COUNTRY (2017, Image Comics)

SOUTHERN BASTARDS meets American Gods in a high-stakes fantasy series that masterfully blends high-octane action …

Family drama + Kirby Crackle

No rating

A neat pairing of Kirby-style cosmic gods and rural family drama—about memory and loss and death and chopping up space-demons with a sentient 12-foot sword. It's pulp, but well-done pulp, with enough world-building to feel fleshed out but not so much that it's bogged down in its own mythology.

Ogi Ogas, Sai Gaddam: Journey of the Mind (2022, Norton & Company Limited, W. W.) No rating

No grand epiphany, but plenty to chew on

No rating

An interesting book that doesn't quite achieve what it promises (the humble task of resolving the age-old question of what consciousnes is and how it emerges from unconscious matter). The authors seem convinced that it does, and maybe something is lost in the translation from math-heavy research papers to accessible prose, but I don't think I'm any closer to grasping it.

The key chapter on self makes a distinction between consciousness and self-awareness that I'm having a particularly hard time with, essentially saying that many creatures have qualia experiences of the world, but only humans are aware of themselves having them (unless they're actively engaged in something like the mirror test, at which point a self-aware self emerges only to disappear once the mirror is removed). And I just can't grok the concept of consciousness without awareness.

The idea of consciousness as a process, like a basketball game or hurricane, …

Benjamin Greenaway, Stephen Oram: 22 Ideas About the Future (EBook, Cybersalon Press) No rating

This collection of provocations from the think tank Cybersalon brings together a blend of near-future …

Interesting bite-sized futures

No rating

The ideas are more interesting than the prose, but then these are meant to be bite-sized provocations more than complete stories, so it's hard to complain on that front. Glad to see a mix of hopeful and dystopian futures, along with some that are a mix of both. Tech is rarely just one or the other, and these brief glimpses into possible futures are a great way of illustrating that mixed potential.

Justin Gregg: If Nietzsche Were a Narwhal (Hardcover, 2022, Little, Brown and Company)

An evaluation of human intelligence’s relation to the larger scheme of things, with an emphasis …

Didn't finish

No rating

Didn't make it through the first chapter. Hard to trust a book on intelligence that opens with "there is no doubt that Nietzsche's psychiatric problems were compounded by his intellectual genius" as if that's an uncontroversial statement that isn't cast into doubt by all of the brilliant philosophers who don't end up institutionalized. If you're willing to cherry-pick that much in your opening statements, why should I trust your other arguments about a topic as nuanced as intelligence?