In Poul Anderson's Genesis (New York, 2001), Serdar:
"'...spent a virtuality among human philosophers...'" (p. 93)
The virtuality (virtual reality?) would have been a simulated environment appearing to his brain only while his body lay somewhere safe but unconscious of its external environment - although the philosophers with whom he conversed might have been distinct self-conscious AI programs? Naia says that their generation:
"'...slip away into dream worlds...'" (p. 94)
When Serdar proposes a wilderness trip to the real Himalayas, he has to clarify that he does mean a "'Reality pleasure.'" (ibid.)
Much later, when the Solar intelligence "emulates" Earth, the "emulation" is much more than a virtual reality. Inanimate objects remain in place on the surface of the emulated Earth even when no one is observing them. The emulation appears not to a single human being immersed in it but to an entire emulated global population who believe that they inhabit the material universe.
The emulations:
"...could be works of imagination - fairy-tale worlds, perhaps, where benevolent gods ruled and magic ran free." (p. 146)
So how many fantasies that we have read have been set inside emulations? No doubt a fairy-tale world would suit Serdar or Naia but Gaia, the Solar intelligence, uses her emulations to study possible histories of Earth. However, there is a distinct fantasy element. Two human beings who had been uploaded into AI's have been downloaded into an emulation and can transfer between emulations by commanding their amulets:
"In perception, the amulets were silvery two-centimeter discs that hung on a user's breast, below garments. In reality - outer-viewpoint reality - they were powerful, subtle programs with intelligences of their own." (p.171)
The parallelism with a fantasy work like E Nesbit's The Story Of The Amulet is obvious.
Hi, Paul!
ReplyDeleteI have to admire the ingenuity and zeal with which you read and comment on the works of Poul Anderson. It puts my own efforts, such as the 24 letters I wrote to him and my 14 or 15 contributions here into the shade! (Smiles)
Sean