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Aurora
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2016 Reads > AUR: Things that bothered me (spoilerific)

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message 1: by Andrés (new)

Andrés (RedBishop) | 35 comments I found the book ok, I don't agree with the main premise (view spoiler) so that might have skewed my perspective, but there were a few plot points that I hated and I just had to accept and continue with the story without thinking too much about them:
(view spoiler)
So that's it, I didn't hate it, but I wouldn't recommend it.


message 2: by Rick (last edited May 14, 2016 11:45AM) (new)

Rick 2)(view spoiler)

Additionally, I think KSR is pushing back against a faction of thinking that goes 'well, we're screwing up Earth, time to look at colonizing elsewhere." The entire novel is an argument that elsewhere is highly unlikely to be friendly to our form of life and that it's incredibly hard to create and maintain the complex biosphere humans would need to survive a long space voyage.


Dave Packard | 203 comments Yeah, the end of the book seemed to get very political. (view spoiler)


message 4: by J (new)

J Austill | 125 comments Dave wrote: "Yeah, the end of the book seemed to get very political. [spoilers removed]"

Well, he lives in Davis,CA. Thats not very close to the ocean, but it is California. So maybe he has a Cali viewpoint?


Lindsay | 593 comments Almost all his books have an environmentalist bent, or at least focus heavily on ecological science. As heavy-handed as this one was, his Sciencce in the Capitol books are even more so.


message 6: by Paulo (last edited May 12, 2016 09:03AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Paulo Limp (paulolimp) | 164 comments I think it would be better to tag a big "SPOILERS" sign on the title instead of covering most of the posts we make here. I'd like to comment some of Andres criticisms:

Update: By terpkristin request I'm adding the "spoiler" tag to my arguments below.

(view spoiler)


message 7: by Andrés (last edited May 12, 2016 09:35AM) (new)

Andrés (RedBishop) | 35 comments I think it would be better to tag a big "SPOILERS" sign on the title
it is in the title, I added the spoiler just in case anyone click without paying much attention.

the end of the book seemed to get very political
certainly

(view spoiler)

Ships powered by lasers can only be accelerated (...)
I see, this note would have been helpful in the book, KSR usually doesn't stop at explaining anything and it seemed like an oversight.

Other than that I agree that he gets heavily political at the end,(view spoiler)
Edit: for spoilers


terpkristin | 4407 comments It's common courtesy in these forums to use spoiler tags even if the topic includes "spoiler." There was a thread on this and it was brought up in the podcast. It would be nice to please continue spoiler tag use. https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...


Paulo Limp (paulolimp) | 164 comments Noted, terpkristin, I'm adding the "spoiler" tag to my remarks.

Although I do sustain that on some discussions the excessive use of the spoiler tag is detrimental to the debate.


message 10: by Sean (new) - rated it 3 stars

Sean | 367 comments I already mentioned this in the "voting" thread, but I'll say it here, too:

(view spoiler)


message 11: by Cliff (last edited May 15, 2016 12:49AM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Cliff | 69 comments To defend some of these issues:

2. Rick already addressed this one.
(view spoiler)


specious_reasons | 25 comments In addition to the comments made by others on point #2.

(view spoiler)


message 13: by Iain (last edited May 19, 2016 10:17AM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Iain Bertram (iain_bertram) | 1740 comments Man I was bugged by a lot of the science in this one. I really enjoyed his Mars trilogy even if it did drag at the end. KSR strength is often the politics and interactions of his characters and not the science.

My major science problems are (view spoiler)

I prefer Greg Egan's ideas on interstellar exploration. For example Diaspora which has instances of people who have been uploaded into quantum computers sent in small substrates. I.e. small space ships that take minimal energy. (I also like a book with a solar system sized collider :-) )

Iain


message 14: by Clyde (last edited May 20, 2016 06:49AM) (new) - rated it 2 stars

Clyde (wishamc) | 571 comments Iain wrote: "Man I was bugged by a lot of the science in this one. I really enjoyed his Mars trilogy even if it did drag at the end. KSR strength is often the politics and interactions of his characters and not..."

Well said sir. I very much agree with your comments (both inside spoiler and without). We are resourceful; we can solve big problems.


Robert Osborne (ensorceled) | 84 comments Things that bothered me, not all hurt the book for me:
(view spoiler)


Noomninam Maybe it's because I skew toward a more posthuman, post-singularity-of-some-kind future, but much so-called hard science fiction, and this book in particular, seems not to hold out much hope at all for breakthroughs in science -- especially in the area of biotech.

Okay, not everybody wants to put credence in Alcubierre's warp bubble or any similar workaround to the celestial speed limit. Fictionally, that can even be an interesting limitation. But, in my version of this generation ship saga, assuming they even use bodies for the trip, and elect to remain conscious throughout their voyage, the same people who left Earth, give or take a few accidental deaths and repopulation events, arrive at the chosen star system. Far from rehashing ancient arguments about the privacy issues that surround being "chipped," these individuals are entirely networked to one another and the ship, and various crew members are modded and enhanced in a variety of ways.

They find an inimical "bug" on the first hospitable orb they investigate, and quickly develop a vaccine, or modify their own molecular structure to resist it. Some remain, while others push off to investigate other possible new homes. Done and done. Maybe less agita and infighting in my version, but it actually seems more plausible to me, that many centuries forward, than KSR's otherwise entertaining novel.


message 17: by Rick (last edited May 21, 2016 12:46PM) (new)

Rick The issue with your version, though, is that you've given them a Win button and eliminated conflict. Conflict drives the story - if it's always "well, they're a near god like hive mind" then there's nothing they can't do and all challenges become trivial. That's more a travelogue and less a novel.

It's also almost PRECISELY that aesthetic that the novel is pushing back against. The idea that we'll just naturally become these magical post-humans so why worry about mundane things like droughts and superstorms caused by climate change or epidemics brought about by new bugs like Zika? We'll just naturally ascend and get beyond all of that. In many ways the singularity/post-human outlook is the modern geek version of the rapture. Why worry about this life, the next one will be all better.


Noomninam Thanks, Rick – you make very good points. Still, I don't see a mutual exclusivity between vastly improving the stewardship humans have been doing with this planet and hoping for the kind of exponential advances in all fields of science that seem (to me) almost inevitable. In fact, it seems to be me that science is our best hope for retiring fossil fuels and addressing hunger and the burgeoning problem of worldwide drought. So, I don't see it as a "trash one planet and move on to the next" mentality, though I'm sure some do, and would in any hypothetical future.


message 19: by Iain (new) - rated it 3 stars

Iain Bertram (iain_bertram) | 1740 comments Yes,

The dichotomy is not v Ryan useful. Moon shots inspire us to dream, as does Antarctic exploration, great science, art and many more then things. We should aspire to be better, then learn and grow.

We can save the world and dream of a better future at the same time. After all that is s why we read SF.


Lindsay | 593 comments Of course we can, but KSR is in conversation here with the hundreds of SF novels that imply that we can use the Earth up and leave it behind. I'm absolutely positive he's aware of all the technologies and plot holes that make his book problematic, but his point remains: there is no Planet B.


message 21: by Rick (last edited May 23, 2016 03:35PM) (new)

Rick As Lindsay notes, this book isn't addressing the people who want to use science to fix earth, but those who talk about uploading etc and simply leaving it behind. The underlying assumption in many of those scenarios is almost biblical - in the Bible, the just and righteous get to heaven. In singularity scenarios, it's also the 'right' people.

I think KSR is opposing this on two grounds - one is that it may well be far far harder than we think to find some place where we can live since we evolved here and not there. Second is the blind belief that of course science will always produce an answer in the nick of time. It can produce answers but only if you use it to solve the right problems.


Finally, I think I linked it here but Charlie Stross did a great and lengthy post on just how HARD interstellar travel is, how vast the distances are, etc. Yes, it's fun to read SF where we've solved this via some FTL McGuffin - but too often people forget that it IS a McGuffin and they start to form attitudes about things like star travel that aren't based in current physical reality.


message 22: by Skip (new)

Skip | 517 comments I had two questions and a comment. I'll hide them all in the interests of those that haven't finished.

(view spoiler)


message 23: by Rick (last edited May 24, 2016 12:39PM) (new)

Rick Regarding #3, I think you're right. KSR isn't against colonization per se, but against using it as a magic get out of a dying Earth free card, i.e. the assumption that of course we'll be able to easily live elsewhere and that getting there will be relatively trivial. Too often the people writing fiction where we colonize either posit some kind of FTL or a generation ship that just works. I see Aurora as a reaction against those assumptions, pointing out that the former is impossible (barring some rewriting of physics) and the latter is far more complex than we generally assume.

Some of your proposed measures are reasonable in the sense that they don't violate physics as we know it, but they require a fair bit of highly advanced tech *and* a society rich enough to do those things without committing significant chunks of the GDP to accomplish them.


message 24: by Skip (new)

Skip | 517 comments Rick wrote: "Some of your proposed measures are reasonable in the sense that they don't violate physics as we know it, but they require a fair bit of highly advanced tech *and* a society rich enough to do those things without committing significant chunks of the GDP to accomplish them. "

Right, I made those suggestions just to point out the amount of time, effort, and technology that is required. I get the impression that the author may have been buttonholed at a few too many conventions by bright-eyed enthusiasts and this was his way of "well actually" -ing them.


Caitlin | 358 comments The thing I didn't get was (view spoiler)


Lindsay | 593 comments Tomislav wrote: "[spoilers removed]"

(view spoiler)


Lindsay | 593 comments (view spoiler)


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