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Peter Watts - Echopraxia

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Peter Watts Echopraxia
  • Book:
    Echopraxia
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    Tor Books
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    2014
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    New York
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    978-0-7653-2802-1
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Echopraxia: summary, description and annotation

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Prepare for a different kind of singularity in Peter Watts , the follow-up to the Hugo-nominated novel Its the eve of the twenty-second century: a world where the dearly departed send postcards back from Heaven and evangelicals make scientific breakthroughs by speaking in tongues; where genetically engineered vampires solve problems intractable to baseline humans and soldiers come with zombie switches that shut off self-awareness during combat. And its all under surveillance by an alien presence that refuses to show itself. Daniel Brks is a living fossil: a field biologist in a world where biology has turned computational, a cats-paw used by terrorists to kill thousands. Taking refuge in the Oregon desert, hes turned his back on a humanity that shatters into strange new subspecies with every heartbeat. But he awakens one night to find himself at the center of a storm that will turn all of history inside-out. Now hes trapped on a ship bound for the center of the solar system. To his left is a grief-stricken soldier, obsessed by whispered messages from a dead son. To his right is a pilot who hasnt yet found the man shes sworn to kill on sight. A vampire and its entourage of zombie bodyguards lurk in the shadows behind. And dead ahead, a handful of rapture-stricken monks takes them all to a meeting with something they will only call The Angels of the Asteroids. Their pilgrimage brings Dan Brks, the fossil man, face-to-face with the biggest evolutionary breakpoint since the origin of thought itself.

Peter Watts: author's other books


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Peter Watts

ECHOPRAXIA

For the BUG.

Who saved my life.

WE DO NOT DESTROY RELIGION BY DESTROYING SUPERSTITION.

CICERO

TO CONCENTRATE ON HEAVEN IS TO CREATE HELL.

TOM ROBBINS

We climbed this hill. Each step up we could see farther, so of course we kept going. Now were at the top. Science has been at the top for a few centuries now. And we look out across the plain and we see this other tribe dancing around above the clouds, even higher than we are. Maybe its a mirage, maybe its a trick. Or maybe they just climbed a higher peak we cant see because the clouds are blocking the view. So we head off to find outbut every step takes us downhill. No matter what direction we head, we cant move off our peak without losing our vantage point. So we climb back up again. Were trapped on a local maximum.

But what if there is a higher peak out there, way across the plain? The only way to get there is bite the bullet, come down off our foothill and trudge along the riverbed until we finally start going uphill again. And its only then you realize: Hey, this mountain reaches way higher than that foothill we were on before, and we can see so much better from up here.

But you cant get there unless you leave behind all the tools that made you so successful in the first place. You have to take that first step downhill.

Dr. Lianna Lutterodt, Faith and the Fitness Landscape In Conversation, 2091
The Crown of Thorns External Layout PRELUDE IT IS ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE - photo 1

The Crown of Thorns External Layout

PRELUDE IT IS ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE SYSTEMATICALLY TO CONSTITUTE A NATURAL MORAL - photo 2

PRELUDE

IT IS ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE SYSTEMATICALLY TO CONSTITUTE A NATURAL MORAL LAW. NATURE HAS NO PRINCIPLES. SHE FURNISHES US WITH NO REASON TO BELIEVE THAT HUMAN LIFE IS TO BE RESPECTED.

NATURE, IN HER INDIFFERENCE, MAKES NO DISTINCTION BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL.

ANATOLE FRANCE

A WHITE ROOM, innocent of shadow or topography. No angles: thats crucial. No corners or intrusions of furniture, no directional lighting, no geometries of light and shadow whose intersection, from any viewpoint, might call forth the Sign of the Cross. The wallswall, ratherwas a single curved surface, softly bioluminescent, a spheroid enclosure flattened at the bottom in grudging deference to biped convention. It was a giant womb three meters across, right down to the whimpering thing curled up on the floor.

A womb, with all the blood on the outside.

Her name was Sachita Bhar and all that blood was in her head, too. By now theyd killed the cameras just like everything else but there was no way to take back the images from those first moments: the lounge, the Histo lab, even the broom closet for chrissakes, a grungy little cubby on the third floor where Gregor had hidden. Sachie hadnt been watching when Gregor had been found. Shed been flipping through the channels, frantically scanning for life and finding only the dead, their insides all out now. By the time shed cycled through to the closet feed the monsters had already been and gone.

Gregor, who was in love with that stupid pet ferret of his. Shed shared an elevator with him this morning. She remembered the stripes on his shirt. Otherwise shed have had no idea what to call the mess in the closet.

Shed seen some fraction of the carnage before the cameras went down: friends and colleagues and rivals cut down without remorse or favoritism, their gutted remains sprawled across lab benches and workstations and toilet stalls. And with all those feeds running through the implants in her headwith all her access to all that ubiquitous surveillanceSachita Bhar had not caught so much as a glimpse of the creatures whod done this. Shadows, at most. A flicker of darkness cast by some solitary stalker from a blind spot in the cameras eye. Theyd done it all without ever being seen, without ever seeing each other.

Theyd always been kept isolated. For their own good, of course: stick two vampires in the same room and their own hardwired territoriality would put them at each others throats in an instant. And yet they were working together, somehow. At least half a dozen, confined, incommunicado, acting in sudden precise concert. Theyd done it all without ever meeting face-to-faceand even at the height of the slaughter, in those last moments before the cameras died, they had remained invisible. The whole massacre had happened from the corner of Sachies eye.

How did they do it? How did they survive the angles?

Someone else might have enjoyed the irony; she hid in a refuge for monsters, one of the few places in the whole damn building where they could open their eyes without risking a death sentence. Right angles were verboten here. This was where Achilles heels were put to the test, a cross-free zone where geometry was precisely controlled and neurological leashes optimized. Elsewhere, civilized geometry threatened on all sides: tabletops, windowpanes, a million intersections of appliance and architecture just waiting for the right viewpoint to send vampires into convulsions. Those monsters wouldnt

shouldnt

last an hour out there without the antiEuclideans that suppressed the Crucifix Glitch. Only here, in the white wombwhere poor, stupid Sachita Bhar had run when the lights went outcould they dare to open unprotected eyes.

And now one of them was in here with her.

She couldnt see it. Her own eyes were shut, squeezed tight against the butchery flashburned into her head. She heard no sound but the endless animal keening in her own throat. But something drank a little of the light falling on her face. The swirling red darkness inside her eyelids dimmed some infinitesimal, telltale fraction, and she knew.

Hello, it said.

She opened her eyes. It was one of the females: Valerie, theyd named her, after some departmental chairman whod retired the year before. Valerie the Vampire.

Valeries eyes red-shifted the light and threw it back at her, blood-orange stars in a face flushed with aftermath. She towered over Sachie like an insectile statue, motionless, even her breathing imperceptible. Moments from death and with nothing better to do, some subroutine in Sachies head ticked off the morphometrics: such inhumanly long limbs, the attenuate heat-dissipating allometry of a metabolic engine running hot. Subtly jutting mandible,lupine as a hominids could be, to hold all those teeth. Stupid turquoise smock, smart-paper/telemetry composite weave: Valerie must have been scheduled for physio work today. Ruddy complexion, the bloody flash-flood vasodilation of the predator in hunting mode. And the eyes, those terrifying luminous pinpoints

Finally it registered: Contracted pupils.

Shes not on Auntie U

Suddenly Sachies cross was out, last-ditch kill switch, the talisman everyone got on Day One along with their ID: empirically tested, proven in the crunch, redeemed by Science after uncounted centuries spent slumming as a religious fetish. Sachie held it up with sudden desperate bravado, thumbed the stud. Spring-loaded extensions shot from each tip and her little pocket totem was suddenly a meter on a side.

Thirty degrees of visual arc, Sachie. Maybe forty for the tough ones. Make sure its perpendicular to line of sight, the angles only work when theyre close to ninety degrees but once this little baby covers enough arc the visual cortex fries like a circuit in a shitstorm

Gregs words.

Valerie cocked her head and studied the artifact. Any second now, Sachie knew, this nightmare creature would collapse in a twitching mass of tetany and shorting synapses. That wasnt faith; it was

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