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Existență par David Brin
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Existență

par David Brin

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
9325122,978 (3.43)21
In a future world dominated by a neural-link web where people can tune into live events and revolutions can be instantly sparked, an active alien communication device is discovered in orbit around the Earth, triggering an international upheaval of fear, hope and violence.
Membre:vladmihaisima
Titre:Existență
Auteurs:David Brin
Info:
Collections:Votre bibliothèque
Évaluation:****1/2
Mots-clés:first contact, science fiction, near future

Information sur l'oeuvre

Existence par David Brin

  1. 00
    Les Univers multiples, Tome 2 : Espace par Stephen Baxter (Aarontay)
    Aarontay: Another attempt to explain the Femi's Paradox.
  2. 00
    Les Univers multiples, Tome 1 : Temps par Stephen Baxter (Aarontay)
    Aarontay: Another resolution of the Fermi's Paradox.
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» Voir aussi les 21 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 51 (suivant | tout afficher)
This is David Brin's best book in quite a few years. OK, I know that's not saying a lot, but I found this to be a worthy and enjoyable space opera. The pacing is all wrong -- the first half of the book drags on and is boring -- but keep reading, because it gets better. The last half of the book is fascinating and thought-provoking. It's basically a take on the Fermi paradox (think Alastair Reynolds), but with a bunch of new twists I haven't seen before. Good stuff, once you get past the boring beginning. ( )
  dwagon17 | Apr 29, 2024 |
Unconventional first contact story touching a lot of actual or near future issues that humanity could have to deal with. Much more anchored in what might be physically possible than other first contact stories, and follows the situation over a significant period of time allowing the possibility to touch many aspects and situations and see characters in evolution. Due to the size gives a bit the feeling of connected short stories (although the main topics remain central), as some characters appear for short stretches not to be talked again after or development that looked important at some point are set aside. Very enjoyable overall and thought provoking. ( )
  vladmihaisima | Apr 20, 2024 |
Beware of spoilers!

This book is, with more than 800 pages (at least that's what my e-reader says) a pretty hefty brick. But it's also a book about ideas, and Brin is very thorough in his exploration of these ideas, even if it happens at the expense of cohesive plot and character arcs.

What's it about? He gives his very own answer to the Fermi paradox, the question why no alien lifeform has made contact in any form when it's reasonable to assume that Earth is not particularly special and there's life basically everywhere.

However, the main topic is not so much his answer to this specific question - that countless alien civilisations swarm the galaxy like viruses with the sole purpose to replicate themselves and to push their victims into inevitable self-destruction - but the reaction of humanity to these discoveries.

"Humanity" is by no means a unified entity, though; 10 billions live on a planet ravaged by ecological disasters and exploitation, in a global society which is highly technologised and dependent on AI on one side and highly fragmented and hierarchical on the other. There are several degrees of technology sceptics, there are the technology believers and supporters who want advancement at all costs, there are the super-rich oligarchs with their own agenda, there are autistics who fight for their recognition not as an abnormality, but as a different development strand. There are AIs and enhanced animals, formerly extinct lifeforms and ancient alien spaceships - and all of these have a voice and an opinion, fears and hopes.

It's a cacophony, and it reads like one - as complex as chaotic. Some of these voices get a lot of page-time, and those are the ones that remain. I loved Tor Povlov, journalist gone hero gone cyborg-explorer-in-space. Gerald Livingston, the pragmatic trash collector in orbit who sets the whole thing in motion, and Hamish Brookeman, the former bestseller author too busy with propaganda to listen to the voices in his head. But there are also too many characters who get no development, who are discarded after they served their function to illustrate a certain idea or side-topic. Did we really need the POV of a psychic octopus? A lot of redundancies and wasted potential here.

And then there's the inserts, little interludes that interrupt the main narrative. An essay about all the ways how humanity - and any developed civilisation - could have (and perhaps should have) destroyed itself. The poetic but barely intelligible thoughts of an autistic person. The challenges to aliens that may or may not hide somewhere in the solar system and refuse to make contact.

And still, in the end this whole cacophony makes sense. Because, what remains? It's the fact that our diversity is our greatest strength. Our diversity, our flexibility, our ability to emphasise, to accept and - most important of all - to adapt. It's what saves us, in the end, and it's an overall optimistic, hopeful view on mankind and its future that Brin presents here. ( )
  DeusXMachina | Feb 16, 2024 |
This is a story with Big Ideas to cover, and it covers them pretty well. Bu-u-u-u-ut, that doesn't necessarily make it a well-told story. It frequently felt to me as if the Ideas were getting in the way of the narrative. And perhaps Mr. Brin deliberately made the choice, feeling that the Ideas were what was important. But I found [b:Existence|13039884|Existence|David Brin|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1326053679s/13039884.jpg|18203750] harder to get through than other books by Brin that I have read. ( )
  Treebeard_404 | Jan 23, 2024 |
Story: 5 / 10
Characters: 7
Setting: 8
Prose: 7

Strong concept, but too many irrelevant story threads results in a largely unintelligible book. ( )
  MXMLLN | Jan 12, 2024 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 51 (suivant | tout afficher)
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Those who ignore the mistakes of the future are bound to make them.

- Joseph Miller
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To "Tether Joe" Carroll, who spins real space lariats . . .
and
"Doc" Sheldon Brown, who teaches time travelers . . .

. . . and Ralph Vicinanza,
who helped many dreams and dreamers to thrive.
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what matters? do i? or ai? + the question spins
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I, AMPHORUM

The universe had two great halves.
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Although this novel has some elements in common with the Uplift books, it is not part of that series.
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In a future world dominated by a neural-link web where people can tune into live events and revolutions can be instantly sparked, an active alien communication device is discovered in orbit around the Earth, triggering an international upheaval of fear, hope and violence.

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David Brin est un auteur LibraryThing, c'est-à-dire un auteur qui catalogue sa bibliothèque personnelle sur LibraryThing.

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