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Tag: politics

Review: Rebecca Solnit’s “Men Explain Things to Me”

“I think the future of something we may no longer call feminism must include a deeper inquiry into men,” writes Rebecca Solnit in the closing pages of Men Explain Things to Me. “Feminism sought and seeks to change the whole human world; many men are on board with the project, but how it benefits men, […]

Review: Neal Stephenson’s “Seveneves”

Three years ago, my father pointed me toward a frightfully thick book called Cryptonomicon that permanently rearranged my relationship with modern fiction. Since that first taste, Neal Stephenson has challenged me in every way an author can (including nearly boring me to death). Stephenson looms larger in my literary pantheon––and weighs more heavily on my […]

Quotes 5-28-2015

“‘All I’m saying is that if you’ve gone where I’ve already gone, in terms of thinking about that––’ ‘If you’ve drunk the Singularity Kool-Aid, in other words?’ Doob said. ‘Yeah, Doob, as you know I’ve already done, then you’ve already made a fundamental break with trying to be Nature Boy. I am never going to […]

Quotes 5-27-2015

“This was how the mind worked. The mind couldn’t think about the End of the World all the time. It needed the occasional break, a romp through the trivial. Because it was through trivia that the mind was anchored in reality, as the largest oak tree was rooted, ultimately, in a system of rootlets.” ––Seveneves, […]

Review: Ramez Naam’s “Apex”

Ramex Naam’s Nexus Arc has become wildly popular since I read the first installment back in early 2013. I’ve enjoyed this series and would recommend it to pretty much anyone interested in near-future scifi, but I have to admit that Apex was a rather lukewarm finale. While Naam has created a vibrant speculative landscape full […]

Review: Martin Ford’s “Rise of the Robots”

If you decide to read one piece of nonfiction this summer, let this be it. Martin Ford’s Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future is one of the most intelligent and important works of futurism to date. Although the book’s title might trigger images of popcorn and 3D glasses rather […]

Quotes 5-12-2015

“In an interview with CBS News, the president of the United States was asked if the nation’s dire unemployment problem was likely to improve soon. ‘There’s no magic solution,’ he replied. ‘To even stand still we have to move very fast.’ By this, he meant that the economy needs to create tens of thousands of […]

Quotes 5-7-2015

“Princess Nell’s recent travels through the lands of King Coyote, and the various castles with their increasingly sophisticated computers that were, in the end, nothing more than Turing machines, had caught her up in a bewildering logical circle. In Castle Turing she had learned that a Turing machine could not really understand a human being. […]

Review: Robert Kuttner’s “Debtors’ Prison”

Since well before the 2008 financial crisis, the practice of economic austerity has beleaguered American and European politics. Praised by the right as a panacea of renewed financial responsibility, and decried by the left as a mechanism for dismantling the West’s already struggling middle classes, austerity signifies a critical juncture where battered economies face radically […]

Quotes 5-4-2015

“A book is different––it is not just a material possession but the pathway to an enlightened mind, and thence to a well-ordered society, as the Master stated many times.” ––The Diamond Age: Or, a Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer, by Neal Stephenson, loc. 2709-16   “This view of the current crisis and its necessary remedy is […]