Review: Oceanic by Greg Egan (original) (raw)

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

GREG EGAN‘s science fiction is both audacious and understated – intellectual rabbit-punches delivered so elegantly that it is a pleasure to be stunned. The 12 stories in this collection cover a vast range.

A defect in number theory opens the way to dangerous inhabitants of the “dark integers”. Within a crystal supercomputer, brutal acceleration of evolution spawns virtual intelligences who could solve our problems but may choose not to. Playing quantum soccer leads to deep thoughts on immortality. Alan Turing debates AI with C. S. Lewis on live television. Immense galactic quests seek an impossible planet, a mathematical Theory…

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