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posted by martyb on Wednesday February 13 2019, @01:22AM   Printer-friendly
from the cell-ular-automaton dept.

March: We Are Legion (We Are Bob) (Bobiverse #1) by Dennis Taylor

Discuss The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress by Robert A. Heinlein in the comments below.

Fiasco was translated into English in 1988 by Michael Kandel:

Fiasco (Polish: Fiasko) is a science fiction novel by Polish author Stanisław Lem, first published in a German translation in 1986. The book, published in Poland the following year, is a further elaboration of Lem's skepticism: in Lem's opinion, the difficulty in communication with alien civilizations is cultural disparity rather than spatial distance. The failure to communicate with an alien civilization is the main theme of the book.

Previously: Announcement postMars, Ho!FoundationThe Three-Body ProblemSnow Crash


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  • (Score: 2, Disagree) by HiThere on Wednesday February 13 2019, @05:37PM (1 child)

    by HiThere (866) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday February 13 2019, @05:37PM (#800660) Journal

    No. No. No.

    It was NEVER a reasonable assumption. It was merely an assumption necessary for the story to work, which is a very different thing.

    If you want a more reasonable scenario that was fictional, look at "A Logic Named Joe". It was written by Murray Leinster in 1946. It still wouldn't work, but it was, at the time, a (more) reasonable scenario, and is still much more reasonable than "Adan Selene" (AKA "Mike"). It also contains a proto-Internet.

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  • (Score: 2) by NotSanguine on Wednesday February 13 2019, @11:28PM

    by NotSanguine (285) <{NotSanguine} {at} {SoylentNews.Org}> on Wednesday February 13 2019, @11:28PM (#800783) Homepage Journal

    And by the way, I read A Logic Named Joe many years ago (and more recently two or three years ago) and as I recall, it wasn't all that different from Heinlein's Mycroft.

    IIRC, in both scenarios, they kept piling on more and more hardware, applications, data processing and external input/stimuli. In the case of the Leinster story there was more direct interaction with humans as I recall.

    Maybe I'll go back and read it again.

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