From: Alintelbot@aol.com
Date: Thu Jul 08 1999 - 00:04:14 MDT
>Mac Tonnies (AIintelbot) wrote:
>>
>>Natasha Vita More mentioned in an unrelated post that she was not, for the
>>most part, influenced by science fiction. As an avid sf reader, I find
this
>>interesting. Could you elaborate on your influences? Sf has always
>>functioned as a sort of memetic fountainhead for me; transhumanism came
>>along
>>as a very happy coincidence...though not entirely as a surprise.
>It is interesting. I, too, am not primarily influenced by science
>fiction. That is not to say that I haven't read quite a few sf novels, but
>their overall effect on how I live my life is quite minimal. The two
>exceptions are David Zindell's quartet, and Neal Stephenson's _The Diamond
>Age_. My influences come from reading about new breakthroughs and studies
>which are actually being done. Conceptual progress is a fabulous thing...
>particularly for those new to transhumanism, but actualized progress is far
>more preferable in my mind. It is an exciting time to be alive.
I couldn't agree more! I honestly think my generation (I'm 23) will be one
of the first to reap the benefits of some of the staggeringly complex
biomedical leaps that are in the works. My taste in science fiction has
changed (not "matured," by any means) from an interest in hard science to
more "literary" sf (whatever the hell that means).
"The Diamond Age" is a fabulous book about a future that I can actually see
happening. "Holy Fire" by Bruce Sterling is another with this quality (which
is rarer than some might think). Other "hard" sf novels that have seeded me
with progressive ideas: "Red Mars" by Kim Stanley Robinson, "Timescape" by
Gregory Benford, "Childhood's End" by Arthur C. Clarke, "Sterling's
"Schismatrix"...these are books that seethe with thought-food--and they're of
"literary" quality to boot.
Lately I've been reading a lot of J.G. Ballard. Steve Erickson
("Amnesiascope") is another author with an appropriately millennial
perspective.
Sagan's "Cosmos" turned me on to popular science writing more than any other
single book; now I read a great deal of nonfiction on science/culture. One
of the best I've read recently is Mark Dery's "Escape Velocity." Alex
Heard's "Apocalypse Pretty Soon" follows a similar theme (and it's
hilarious), though it equates cryonics and transhumanism as some form of
misguided millennial hysteria. At least that's what I got out of Heard's
commentary; I'm willing to forgive him, as his book is quite blatantly a
personal take on things, and he makes no real attempt to speak on behalf of
"reason" for all of us.
Mac Tonnies
alintelbot@aol.com
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