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The Silicon Man

de Charles Platt

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This is one of those novels about the wonders of cyberspace. Published in 1991 it's set in 2030, in a near future that has become stagnant and has taken limits to the future for granted. Enter James Bayley, FBI agent who stumbles onto a top secret project called Lifescan: an attempt to create a cyber-immortality--a silicon man. The novel plays very much like a technothriller by Michael Crichton or Dean Koontz, only taking place in the future rather than in a contemporary setting. It's well-written and flowing with appealing, or at least distinctive, if not particularly complex, characterizations.

I grabbed three novels by Platt because I saw him listed as a Prometheus Award nominee--for Free World and Silicon Man. The first I tried, Twilight of the City, I found lacking--in fact didn't even finish that one. I did complete the next, Planet of the Voles. I found the ideas in that one more interesting, but found the ending less than satisfying. I rated both those books two to two and a half stars. Silicon Man is by far the most enjoyable, not a keeper perhaps or greatly memorable, but entertaining. In fact, I really like what Platt did with the antagonist--he's not a simple villain as it first appears--nor does he wind up misunderstood or redeemed; it's more complicated than that. The Silicon Man is published decades later than the two others I read so it might be Platt got better over the years and his later novels worth seeking out. ( )
  LisaMaria_C | Apr 18, 2013 |
My reactions to reading this novel in 1991. Some spoilers follow.

This book combines the concern with computer technology seen in the works of Vernor Vinge (who's help is acknowledged), the exploration of technology's social and moral implications (with the resulting moral ambivalency) seen in James Gunn's sf (at least as seen in his The Burning and The Immortals), and the radical, anarchical-libertarian politics of Norman Spinrad into a novel I liked a lot.

This novel is concerned not only with the technical aspects of recording a person's consciousness and putting it into a virtual reality of a computer, but, perhaps even more importantly, moral, psychological, and social questions are addressed.

The makeup of consciousness and memories is not understood. Platt makes the analogy of a magnetic tape recording a symphony without understanding the principles of composition -- but recorded with brute force. Neurons and their connections are recorded finetuning a person's perception of stimuli -- making sure, for instance, that the signal for the taste of fine brandy is not the same as that for beer. The shortcomings of fractal techniques for picture generation is covered as are the shortcomings of pseudomorphs -- Platts termed for personalities not recorded but created for the computer. The latter tend to be rather one-dimension. And, of course, there are the limitations of computer space and the need for a constant power supply. Platt's "infomorphs", as the personality recordings are known, reside in the computer system MAPHIS which Platt even presents a diagram for. All these technical aspects are included to, as some hard sf does, get people to take the possibility seriously.

Platt's novel is in the style of a thriller so the questions are briefly raised to provoke thought but Platt moves on and leaves his reader to ponder implications. Would life in a virtual reality be somehow spiritually corrupting because of the possiblity for absolutely unlimited abuse of pseudomorphs, the realization of every fantasy? (Platt makes a valid point that most people's fantasies are "corny" and no longer shocking once they're in the open of the virtual reality of the computer.) Then there is the very basic question of whether a copy of a person's consciousness is that person. (Lifescan scientist, biologist, and Zen Buddhist Michael Butterworth says no and won't undergo the process.) There is the potential to realize transcendental opportunities that virtual reality offers -- to fly, to walk on the moon, to flee a crippled body like Rosalind French does -- to a world of sensuality ignored in her physical body's quest for immortality. Of course, a form of immortality could be offered but so could eternal slavery. The control Gottbaum has over the other infomorphs is troubling. There is the loneliness of being the first infomorphs to possess brains encoded in computers carried about by robots. And, of course, the whole project is transhuman.

These issues are well dramatized in the novel's central character of Leo Gottbaum, the scientist who's vision -- political and scientific -- is realized in the novel. Gottbaum is a brilliant sixties anarchist -- a ruthless, selfish one. One might agree with his criticisms of the novel's staid, centrally-planned, socialist, poor America but Gottbaum (whose name means "God-Tree" is German -- I suspect this intentional symbolism given Gottbaum's reference to himself as god of the virtual environment and the Tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil, but it's curious) is unpleasant. He's willing to kill an FBI agent, protagonist James Bayley when the latter uncovers his Lifescan tampering but is talked out of it. He treats his daughter badly. He sets himself up as god in MAPHIS and, via virus proxy, the world's cybersphere. He refuses to believe that society has any right to control, direct, or curtail his activities. Yet, he does not harass or kill the other infomorphs (He does battle French and Porter when they try to usurp his plan for world anarchy, but he doesn't kill them.) He heralds a free, technologically advanced world at novel's end with his multiple personalities constantly maintaining anarchy but otherwise not interfering in the world. Perhaps Platt set out to make him one of those great men who do good things but aren't very likeable. ( )
  RandyStafford | Dec 3, 2012 |
When FBI agent James Bayley decided to do a solo investigation how the scientific Life Scan project has been allowed to eat up billions of pounds of funding over 30 years while apparently being a total failure, he finds that he has bitten off more than he can chew. This is an interesting early novel about the possibilities of transferring the human mind into cyberspace and the consequences for both individuals and society. Unfortunately, once the setting moves from L.A. into cyberspace it seems to peter off as soon as it has described the first infomorph's acclimatisation to its new environment. I could have done with more conflict between the 'infomorphs', some resolution of Yumi's story, and a stronger ending. ( )
  isabelx | Mar 16, 2011 |
The basic plot here is that a somewhat shady research group has been illicitly using government grants and black-market trading to finance the development of a project that will provide them with electronic immortality - their brains will be scanned into an online computer system where they can live forever. The black market dealings attract the attention of an FBI agent, and since he is about to blow their cover, the mad scientists kidnap him and use him as their first "test subject". Of course, the process of scanning the brains also destroys the brain tissue, so his physical body is killed in the process. The bulk of the book focuses on the agent's struggle to adapt to his new existence and keep the mad scientists from destroying him, and on his wife's struggle to find out what happened to him -- with some help from the mad scientist's daughter. A little simplified, of course, but this is the jist of it.

I probably would have enjoyed this book more had I not previously read another that did a far better job with the same topic - John Saul's 'Shadows'. In that book, the mad scientists in question are using the brains of genius but troubled children - creating a much more intriguing perspective on the events. 'Shadows' also does a better job with character development and providing a three-dimensional backstory.
1 vota miki | Jul 11, 2007 |
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Charles Plattautor primaritotes les edicionscalculat
Podevin, Jean-FrançoisAutor de la cobertaautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
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