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Time Gate (1989)

por Robert Silverberg (Editor), Bill Fawcett (Editor)

Outros autores: Poul Anderson (Contribuidor), Gregory Benford (Contribuidor), Pat Murphy (Contribuidor), Robert Sheckley (Contribuidor), Robert Silverberg (Contribuidor)

Séries: Time Gate (1)

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In the mid 21st Century the United States is a sleeping giant, lost in dreams of faded glory. But in one field we still reign supreme: entertainment, which in this future means computer simulations. That's why it is in America that the final computer breakthrough is achieved, the simulation of genuine thinking, feeling personalities from history: Elizabeth I, Genghis Khan, Pizarro, Socrates, Moses and Joan of Arc. You can see them all in action, with and against each other, in a world they never made—but just might remake closer to their silicon hearts' desire. At the publisher's request, this title is sold without DRM (Digital Rights Management).… (mais)
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This is a collection of novellas involving advanced Artificial Intelligence by different authors set in a SF setting created by Robert Silverberg, consisting of:

Robert Silverberg: Enter a Soldier. Later, Enter Another. (Pizzaro meets Socrates)
Robert Sheckley: The Resurrection Machine. (Cicero meets Bakunin)
Poul Anderson: Statesmen. (Friedrich (II) Hohenzollern meets Machiavelli)
Gregory Benford: The Rose and the Scalpel. (Joan of Arc meets Voltaire)
Pat Murphy: How I Spent My Summer Vacation. (Bakunin again, with an AI hacker who is 16 years old)

Given that this was published in 1989, it's fairly well done. The stories include sections that are told from the point of view of the AI constructs of the historical personages. If nothing else this book should inspire readers to check out the said historical personages in wikipedia (and other places), and this is not a bad thing. ( )
  Farree | Sep 9, 2018 |
It's an absurd notion that, by programing in to a computer biographical details about a dead person and their time, you can create a sentient version of that historical personage. It's probably not even original to this shared world anthology. And, certainly, the idea of sentient programs haunting cyberspace goes back to earlier work by Vernor Vinge and William Gibson.

But Silverberg is a master reclaimer of the old vigor of cliches. And here the effort, under his editorial direction, mostly works.

The usual gimmick in each story is the meeting of two famous people who never met in reality. Between each story is the barest of expository mortar to hold things together, and three fifths of the collection works well.

Silverberg's own "Enter a Soldier. Later: Enter Another" begins things with a startling proof of concept: a compare and contrast of Pizarro and Socrates. The ruthless, amoral, and illiterate conquestidor holds his own against the philosopher. After computer simulcra prove feasible, a crash US program to develop their commerical potential is the subject of Robert Sheckley's "The Resurrection Machine". But when your products are Cicero and the anarchist Bakunin, rollout isn't going to happen as planned -- if at all. Whether through sheer stubborness or master manipulation, both get their way. Given their frequent use of history in their fiction, it's no surprise that Silverberg's story and Poul Anderson's "Statesmen" are the book's highlights. Machiavelli and Frederick the Great advise two warring economic combines and reintroduce the world to the finer points of intrigue, statecraft, and propaganda. And Anderson reminds us that, in a world of material plenty, there are still plenty of reasons for war.

Unfortunately, the collection then goes downhill. Surprisingly, Gregory Benford's "The Rose and the Scalpel" doesn't work on its own terms or in the context of the collection. Starting from an unlikely premise that the political and cultural future of France hinges on a debate between simulcras of Voltaire and Joan of Arc, he grafts on a farcical war of the sexes and the question of robot rights. Unfortunately, sentient robots only make their appearance in this story of the anthology, so it seems a gratuitious example of a theme better treated in Benford's independent work. Benford does present some interesting details about Voltaire's life. Pat Murphy's "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" now seems oh-so-1980s in its romantic view of hacker anarchists. It's clash of historical titans features a return of Bakunin and his meeting with Queen Victoria.

The lives of its famous characters and their unlikely juxtaposition is the delight of this collection, and Sheckley, Silverberg, and Anderson combine that with thoughtful stories that work on their own terms and with the shared world. They make the collection worth reading. ( )
  RandyStafford | Dec 28, 2011 |
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Nome do autorPapelTipo de autorObra?Estado
Silverberg, RobertEditorautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Fawcett, BillEditorautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Anderson, PoulContribuidorautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Benford, GregoryContribuidorautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Murphy, PatContribuidorautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Sheckley, RobertContribuidorautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Silverberg, RobertContribuidorautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
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In the mid 21st Century the United States is a sleeping giant, lost in dreams of faded glory. But in one field we still reign supreme: entertainment, which in this future means computer simulations. That's why it is in America that the final computer breakthrough is achieved, the simulation of genuine thinking, feeling personalities from history: Elizabeth I, Genghis Khan, Pizarro, Socrates, Moses and Joan of Arc. You can see them all in action, with and against each other, in a world they never made—but just might remake closer to their silicon hearts' desire. At the publisher's request, this title is sold without DRM (Digital Rights Management).

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