Friday, 3 August 2012

AI But No Immortality

In Poul Anderson's Harvest Of Stars (New York, 1993), a downloaded copy of Anson Guthrie's mind is kept in an artificial neural network after his death. Downloads are rare because most people would not like to be a machine, therefore know that their copy would not like it either. A character comments on downloads:

" 'No deliverance from personal death.' No deliverance anywhere in sight, after it turned out that aging was built into the human genome. You could improve matters only up to a point." (p. 161)

Thus, in this imaginary future there will be neither mutant immortals (see Anderson's The Boat Of A Million Years) nor antithanatics (see his World Without Stars) but there could be anti-senescence (the same author's History Of Technic Civilization). As I suggested  in an earlier post about Artificial Intelligence (AI), Anderson almost systematically explores every possible answer to a question and every possible implication to be derived from an sf premise.

Guthrie the download is sceptical about the prospect of AI although he realises that hardware programmed to operate like a downloaded personality would be AI and the latter does come onstage later in the novel but I have not reread that far yet.

So this novel's answers are yes to AI but no to bodily immortality.

7 comments:

Paul Shackley said...

I am temporarily working long factory shifts so that reading and blogging are at a minimum.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Hi, Paul!

Understood, re the time constraints you live with.

What I recall, as regards longevity in the HARVEST OF STARS books, is that medical technology allowed unmodified human beings to have life spans averaging 130 years. For Lunarians it was about 140-50 years. So, as the character quoted from the book said, human life spans could be extended only up to a point.

Sean

Paul Shackley said...

It gets worse. This week, I will work 3 12 hour shifts, then drive to Leicester, away from the computer, for about a week. I have had quite a lot of action on the linked Comics Appreciation blog. Am still rereading HARVEST but wanting it to get beyond the political conflict with the Avantists.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Hi, Paul!

At least the demands on your time MAY allow you to reread and rethink the parts of HARVEST OF STARS you've read.

While I have, of course, read my share of Superman and Batman comics as a boy, my real favorites (ha ha!) were the Walt Disney comics. Esp. the Donald Duck and Scrooge McDuck comics.

Sean

Paul Shackley said...

Some comics and "graphic novels" are definitely adult material, eg, WATCHMEN by Alan Moore and THE DARK KNIGHT RETURNS by FRank Miller.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Hi, Paul!

Then you might be interested in what John Wright says about contemporary comics. I'll send you a link.

Sean

Paul Shackley said...

Thank you. I am getting ready to comment more on HARVEST but meanwhile am putting something on my Blish blog.