![]() ![]() Then Mahnoosh is killed in a car crash and Martin discovers that he is dying of cancer, and needs to make provision for the future welfare of his young son Javeed. He marries Mahnoosh, a political activist, and settles in Tehran. ![]() Martin Seymour is an Australian reporter who travels to Iran to report on the pro-democracy demonstrations surrounding the 2012 elections. (You can read chapter 2 of the novel at Egan’s website.) This is an entertaining but rather slight novel that places Egan’s usual concerns-transhumanism, uploading of minds, the ethics of artificial intelligence-in a democratic Iran in the early and mid twenty-first century. “ An entertaining but rather slight novel that places Egan’s usual concerns-transhumanism, uploading of minds, the morality of artificial intelligence-in a democratic Iran in the early and mid twenty-first century.” ◀ Manifold: Space & Origin ✴ ✴ CTC ride to Barkway, Ardeley and Royston ▶Ī review of Greg Egan’s novel Zendegi. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |