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Influx
Influx | Daniel Suarez
14 posts | 5 read | 1 reading | 7 to read
What if our civilization is more advanced than we know? The New York Times bestselling author of Daemon—“the cyberthriller against which all others will be measured” (Publishers Weekly) —imagines a world in which decades of technological advances have been suppressed in an effort to prevent disruptive change. Are smartphones really humanity’s most significant innovation since the moon landings? Or can something else explain why the bold visions of the 20th century—fusion power, genetic enhancements, artificial intelligence, cures for common diseases, extended human life, and a host of other world-changing advances—have remained beyond our grasp? Why has the high-tech future that seemed imminent in the 1960s failed to arrive? Perhaps it did arrive…but only for a select few. Particle physicist Jon Grady is ecstatic when his team achieves what they’ve been working toward for years: a device that can reflect gravity. Their research will revolutionize the field of physics—the crowning achievement of a career. Grady expects widespread acclaim for his entire team. The Nobel Prize. Instead, his lab is locked down by a shadowy organization whose mission is to prevent at all costs the social upheaval sudden technological advances bring. This Bureau of Technology Control uses the advanced technologies they have harvested over the decades to fulfill their mission. They are living in our future. Presented with the opportunity to join the BTC and improve his own technology in secret, Grady resists, and is instead thrown into a nightmarish high-tech prison built to hold rebellious geniuses like himself. With so many great intellects confined together, can Grady and his fellow prisoners conceive of a way to usher humanity out of its artificial dark age? And can they hope to defeat an enemy who wields a technological advantage half a century in the making?
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blurb
tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Daniel Suarez

“He kept the schedule as a way to stay sane. Structure was important to keep the human mind from getting lost...Schedule or no, his mind was indeed starting to get lost.“

Reading about this society brings forth the meme, “I don't want to live in a world such as this...or raise children.“ Also, the setting of “Isolation“ like Beckett's Genesis. It is most emotionally depressing and anxiety-inducing, much more than most.

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tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Daniel Suarez

He wondered how Mozart, Beethoven, and those guys did it. He had some good movements, but unifying the whole was a mother---he wasn't going for Copland's Billy the Kid here. He was going for beauty, a mournful melancholy like that inside him. But he seemed to lack the vocabulary. He had to admit that for all his talents, music was not one of them.

quote
tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Daniel Suarez

'I could never get used to all this high-tech crap. But it's like they say: Anything before you're thirty-five is new and exciting, and anything after that is proof the world's going to hell.'

quote
tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Daniel Suarez

'Certain innovations serve as catalysts for each other---creating a positive feedback cycle. Eventually a technology becomes inevitable. It's managing the transition that's critical.'

Contemp commentary urges us to reflect: how have we done managing these transitions the 19th century catalyzed? Arguably, not well. Late philosopher Bernard Stiegler makes the point regarding the psychosocial stakes in coping. Chalmers reflects on consciousness here

quote
tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Daniel Suarez

Wow, this chapter was a doozie to get through emotionally. I'd like to hear others' thoughts on world-building vision of it and if it struck them as a punch to the gut; as the scientist was trying to cope and rationalize its starkness. Think Matrix + Matt Damon's Elysium + Adjustment Bureau.

'You've been through a traumatic experience, I know. It's never pleasant, but neither is being born. And yet both are necessary to go on to greater things.'

blurb
tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Daniel Suarez

I figured it out, it's David Chalmers!

'Well, it looks like the universe is as crazy as you are, Jon.'
'That's a frightening thought.'
'Agreed. And yet you succeeded'
...
'This ridiculous hair. You know, the first time I met you, I told Greta that a dirty hippie was stalking me.'
'Hey, hair is nature's calendar.'

(Seriously, check out his incredibly articulated interviews on the soft vs hard problems of consciousness.)

blurb
tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Daniel Suarez

Attention! Calling upon the Litsy welcome train to welcome my friend @puzzledbooks

Let's show her what kinds of reading and other challenges we have in this community, please.

I hope you enjoy the community here, Faydra!

JamieArc Welcome to Litsy @puzzledbooks ! I hope you love it like we do! 2y
Chrissyreadit Welcome @puzzledbooks hope you enjoy Litsy! @LitsyEvents is a good place to follow for info about reading events here. My bio has a link with other litsy resources. 2y
puzzledbooks Thank you all for the welcome! 2y
BookDragonNotWorm @puzzledbooks Welcome to Litsy! 📚💙 2y
11 likes4 comments
quote
tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Suarez, Daniel

'Just an observation: You're using enough energy to light a hundred thousand homes---to levitate a mouthful of malt liquor six feet off the ground. That's about as cost-effective as using a Boeing 747 to clean a throw rug.'
'You're not realizing the potential significance of this discovery, Mr. Marrano.'
'Significance is great, but it's not gonna make the economics work any better.'

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tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Daniel Suarez

'Do you even know what chiral superconductors are, Mr. Marrano?'
'No, and it's not for a lack of trying. But I do know the government invested in this place. So someone somewhere must understand it.'
'And thus marches Wall Street.'
...
'Okay. And how does that relate to chiral superconductors?'
'It doesn't.'
'That's fraud.'
'Fraud's an ugly word. Anyone reading the business plan able to comprehend our math would clearly understand...'
'Fraud.'

quote
tokorowilliamwallace
Influx | Daniel Suarez

Orienting dedication:

“The future is already here---it's just not very evenly distributed.“ William Gibson

I wish the reference was more specific of which work of his it came from! Maybe someone on here has read enough Gibson to know of the reference.

RamsFan1963 The quote isn't from one of Gibson's books, it's from an article about future planning in the December 2003 issue of The Economist. 2y
tokorowilliamwallace @RamsFan1963, thank you. I guess I just don't like it when authors include quotes with a specific reference. 2y
8 likes2 comments
blurb
arubabookwoman
Influx | Suarez, Daniel
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This is what most of Chapter 1 read like: I understood nothing. I was ready to DNF, & leave the book to be enjoyed by astrophysicists. But I read on, and am now enjoying this SF thriller. I think all you really need to know from Chapter 1 is that they invented something Very Important.

LiteraryinLawrence Good to know! 4y
charl08 Yikes! I think I'd have put it down. 4y
21 likes2 comments
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Daizy
Influx | Daniel Suarez
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Daizy
Influx | Daniel Suarez
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Just started INFLUX by Daniel Suarez. Already an interesting paragraph on page 18. It reminds of all the ways we test our students nowadays- think inside the box to excel at state testing! Think outside the box and you certainly won't get that elusive perfect score. I think I'm gonna like it......

blurb
AnneA.Rose
Influx | Daniel Suarez
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Any thoughts on this?
I'm thinking about making it a part of the family and I've been reading Illuminae, so I think I'm a science fiction fan after all.
#readingrocks
#sciencefictionismad