Simulacron-3
Daniel F. Galouye
I finally FINALLY got a chance to read Simulacron-3 after my paperbackswap.com request went through. It only took a few years!
This book is the basis for, among other things, the movie The Thirteenth Floor. It's arguably also the inspiration for The Matrix and a lot of related thinking. I'd be curious to know if there are proper antecedents to Simulacron-3, beyond abstract philosophers.
It's interesting reading a book from 1964. The basic idea of simulating a whole world is pretty interesting and modern-feeling, but the gender roles are archaic and computers are basically imagined as bigger versions of that era's, with physical components that you change like a lightbulb and programming basically by wire. And of course there are moving sidewalks everywhere, because that's what we do in the future.
Two quotes to pull out:
"You can hardly stuff people into a machine without starting to wonder about the basic nature of both machines and people." (p. 24, and repeated again later)
"For self-awareness is the only true measure of existence!" (p. 140)
Interesting that the characters care so little for the people in the simulation within a simulation, when they're so concerned about the people in the first simulation... But I am glad I finally encountered this book in person.
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2 comments:
Check out the works of Simak--he may have done this earlier.
C~
Can you be more specific?
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