• Vulcan's Hammer, by PKD

    From Pablo Gener@4:900/102 to All on Mon Jul 22 22:09:02 2024
    I recently have read "Vulcan's Hammer" by Phillip K Dick, and found it wonderful.
    Do you guys know the book or this author's works?
    What are your thoughts on it and what else would you recoommend?

    Malvinas.

    Islas Malvinas, siempre Argentinas!

    ... Islas Malvinas, siempre Argentinas.

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  • From Pablo Gener@4:900/102 to August Abolins on Wed Jul 24 20:32:24 2024
    Hello Pablo Gener!

    ** On Monday 22.07.24 - 22:09, Pablo Gener wrote to All:
    In my research for similar themes of Vulcan's Hammer, I've come
    across these that explore similar ideas of technology,
    artificial intelligence, and dystopian futures:
    The first three you mentioned, I've already read. I'd add to taht list:
    *) Fahrenheit 451 *) Brave New World *) (maybe...) A Clockwork Orange

    All the others, I'll be sure to check out as soon as I can

    These books offer a variety of perspectives on the relationship
    between humans and technology, the potential consequences of
    artificial intelligence, and the nature of dystopian societies.

    I believe taht what these books do (and the whole genre...) is coat up in "sci-fi" a commentary of how crooked and flawed humanity is. It doesn't matter how much tech you throw over it, people will be mean to people (and corporations to the common public), in the end.

    Malvinas.

    Islas Malvinas, siempre Argentinas!

    ... Islas Malvinas, siempre Argentinas.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 2021/12/25 (Windows/64)
    * Origin: The Vault BBS (4:900/102)
  • From August Abolins@2:221/1.58 to Pablo Gener on Wed Jul 24 21:59:00 2024
    Hello Pablo Gener!

    The first three you mentioned, I've already read. I'd add
    to taht list: *) Fahrenheit 451 *) Brave New World *)
    (maybe...) A Clockwork Orange

    I've read those 3 and have seen various movie versions of them
    too.


    All the others, I'll be sure to check out as soon as I can

    The **"The Machine Stops" by E.M. Forster** is an interesting
    tale. Apparently it's the earliest known mention of an imagined
    "internet" in print. It is set in a world where humanity lives
    underground and relies on "the machine" for all its needs. It
    predicts instant messaging and the internet; that's pretty
    interesting for something published 115 years ago.


    I believe taht what these books do (and the whole
    genre...) is coat up in "sci-fi" a commentary of how
    crooked and flawed humanity is. It doesn't matter how much
    tech you throw over it, people will be mean to people (and
    corporations to the common public), in the end.

    Many genres allow the author to imagine consequences and
    outcomes of good/bad human behaviour. Some writers are fine
    philosophers.


    --
    ../|ug

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