selfawarepatterns
selfawarepatterns
SelfAwarePatterns
1K posts
Explorations of science, philosophy, history, politics, science fiction, fantasy, and skepticism.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
selfawarepatterns · 1 day ago
Text
Not Till We Are Lost
Not Till We Are Lost is the fifth Bobiverse book by Dennis Taylor. I’ve been following these books for years. Although there’s usually a delay in reading new releases because they’re initially exclusive to Audible. I do listen to the occasional audiobook, but most of my reading is Kindle editions. Thankfully they subsequently get released under Kindle Unlimited, which is nice. The Bob in these…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 3 days ago
Text
The Forever War
For some reason I had never read Joe Haldeman’s The Forever War, and recently decided to remedy that. Like most classic sci-fi novels, it’s a quick read, much shorter than most contemporary novels. It’s often been called a Vietnam veteran’s response to Robert A. Heinlein’s Starship Troopers. Haldeman himself disputes that, although he admits it’s heavily inspired by Vietnam, and overall much more…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 8 days ago
Text
The Agent Cormac series
A few weeks ago I reviewed Neal Asher’s new book Dark Diamond. It takes place in his Polity universe, a future interstellar society ruled by AIs, where everyone is effectively immortal, but in a dangerous universe. That book featured Ian Cormac and other characters from his earlier Agent Cormac series. I read the first book in that series, Gridlinked, some years ago, but not being really…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 12 days ago
Text
Mickey 7
A couple of weeks ago I reviewed the movie Mickey 17, which I found fairly intelligent. That movie is based on a book, Mickey 7, by Edward Ashton. The book turned out to be on Kindle Unlimited and didn’t look long, and I needed a break from some of the other stuff I was reading, so it fit the bill. The book has the same general story as the movie, about a guy named Mikey, who to get away from a…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 15 days ago
Text
Is quantum immortality a real thing?
In discussions about the Everett interpretation of quantum mechanics, one of the concerns I often see expressed is for the perverse low probability outcomes that would exist in the quantum multiverse. For example, if every quantum outcome is reality, then in some branches of the wave function, entropy has never increased. In some branches, quantum computing doesn’t work because every attempt at…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 21 days ago
Text
Murderbot, Mickey 17, and other TV notes
First a gripe. This week Amazon Prime announced that they were canceling The Wheel of Time. Amazon is in business to make money, and it makes sense to cancel shows that don’t get viewership. But it seems like a lot of people didn’t even know the third season was out. Those who did felt like it was finally starting to grow into its own. Which in my mind indicates a failure of marketing, and…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 1 month ago
Text
Dark Diamond
Over the years I’ve recommended a number of Neal Asher’s books. Although recently I haven’t found his stuff as compelling. Dark Diamond represents something of a return to form for him: epic space opera. The story takes place in his Polity universe, one where Earth and its interstellar colonies are ruled by AI. The AIs ostensibly act in humanity’s best interests, but in a way that humans don’t…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 1 month ago
Text
What is it like to be you?
In 1974, in a landmark paper, Thomas Nagel asks what it’s like to be a bat. He argues that we can never know. I’ve expressed my skepticism about the phrase “what it’s like” or “something it is like” before, and that skepticism still stands. I think a lot of people nod at it, seeing it as self explanatory, while holding disparate views about what it actually means. As a functionalist and…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 2 months ago
Text
What is a non-functional account of consciousness supposed to be?
I’m a functionalist. I think the mind and consciousness is about what the brain does, rather than its particular composition, or some other attribute. Which means that if another system did the same or similar things, it would make sense to say it was conscious. Consciousness is as consciousness does. Functionalism has some advantages over other meta-theories of consciousness. One is that since…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 2 months ago
Text
The Kraken Wakes
Adrian Tchaikovsky announced the other day that he and Emma Newman were starting a new podcast: Starship Alexandria, where they will take turns recommending sci-fi and fantasy books, with most of the episode devoted to discussing them. Their first episode dropped a couple of weeks ago, and Newman made the first recommendation: The Kraken Wakes by John Wyndham. This is a classic science fiction…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 2 months ago
Text
Many-worlds without necessarily many worlds?
IAI has a brief interview of David Deutsch on his advocacy for the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics. (Warning: possible paywall.) Deutsch has a history of showing little patience with other interpretations, and this interview is no different. A lot of the discussion centers around his advocacy for scientific realism, the idea that science is actually telling us about the world,…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 2 months ago
Text
Alien Clay
What would aliens look like? Not just another intelligent species, but alien animals, or entire ecosystems? It’s very hard for us to imagine them without falling back on variations of Earth animals. So aliens in sci-fi often look like insects, octopuses, or other species we’re familiar with. To be sure, aliens would have evolved in the same universe we’re in, with the same laws of physics. So it…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 3 months ago
Text
Severance and other TV notes
Just my usual thoughts on a number of shows I’ve been watching. The third season of Wheel of Time is six episodes in. It starts off with a lot of action and movement. I’m still enjoying the series, particularly since we now appear to be well past what I might have read in the books decades ago, so it’s all new at this point. My only nit is I could have used more of a recap of the previous…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 3 months ago
Text
Sci-fi and fantasy writing podcasts and advice worth checking out
I’ve recently come across a couple of writing podcasts that are worth checking out for any aspiring sci-fi or fantasy authors. The first is On Writing With Brandon Sanderson. Sanderson is a bestselling epic fantasy author with a number of major series under his belt, not the least of which was completing Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series after Jordan died. Sanderson was a major long time…
1 note · View note
selfawarepatterns · 3 months ago
Text
Reducing felt experience requires not preemptively dismissing the solutions
Annaka Harris has a new audio book out which she is promoting. I haven’t listened to it, but based on the interviews and spots like the one below, it appears that she’s doubling down on the conclusions she reached in her book from a few years ago, that consciousness is fundamental and pervasive. The Hard Problem of Consciousness | Annaka Harris Harris starts off by discussing the profound…
0 notes
selfawarepatterns · 4 months ago
Text
Avoiding the structural gaps
A long standing debate in quantum physics is whether the wave function is real. A quick reminder: quantum entities appear to move like waves, including portions interfering with each other. These waves are modeled with the wave function. But once measured, quantum objects manifest as localized points or field excitations. The wave function can’t predict the measurement outcome, only probabilities…
1 note · View note
selfawarepatterns · 4 months ago
Text
Where are the aliens?
Among my earliest memories are the TV series Star Trek and Lost in Space, two shows that promised a universe teeming with alien life, intelligent life. As a boy, the aliens seemed everywhere. We’d probably find some on Mars and Venus, and there wasn’t much doubt we’d find them in other solar systems. And that was assuming they weren’t already visiting us and picking up people on lonely country…
0 notes