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Aristoi Hardcover – January 1, 1992
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But not everyone can handle all this high tech. Not every person is capable of mastering the arts of programming on the fly in the virtual world, or manipulating the microscopic matter of biotech and nanotech. For most people, the idea of being in more than two places at once is more than a little disorienting.
So a special kind of human has evolved - men and women who can handle both the virtual world and the realized world. Who can do two and more things at once, who are smarter and more creative than average. They are the Aristoi, the Best, and as in Plato's vision, they have the care of the Demos, the people, foremost in their minds. The Aristoi control technology and all its fruits. They terraform planets, and when they are done, they choose the people who can emigrate to the new world. They are the absolute rulers of their spheres of creation, but they are benevolent rulers.
What can trouble Paradise? The answer is an Aristos gone mad. An Aristos so committed to a genetic theory that he makes a whole world in secret, cut off from the Hyperlogos that records all knowledge and all actions, in order to test his theories. And who will kill to keep his secret safe.
- Length
448
Pages
- Language
EN
English
- PublisherTor Books
- Publication date
1992
January 1
- Dimensions
6.5 x 1.4 x 9.5
inches
- ISBN-100312851723
- ISBN-13978-0312851729
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Product details
- Publisher : Tor Books; First Edition (January 1, 1992)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 448 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0312851723
- ISBN-13 : 978-0312851729
- Item Weight : 1 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.45 x 1.38 x 9.53 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,771,407 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #7,548 in Hard Science Fiction (Books)
- #21,724 in Space Operas
- #114,839 in American Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Nevertheless, the various settings that the scenes take place in are vivid, alive, and detailed. The representation of the Aristoi as a special race of "superhumans" that are capable of much more than the average person is believable to me in the context of what humanity could evolve into thousands of years from now. Their abilities are realized through a combination of nanotechnology and superior intelligence, which didn't seem too far fetched to me. You may have heard of so-called "human calculators" like Alexis Lemaire who can mentally perform astoundingly complex mathematical calculations in seconds. It seems that the human brain has tremendous untapped potential, and what the Aristoi accomplish with it is certainly plausible.
Another concept that Williams introduces is that of the daimones, one-dimensional personalities who can willingly become part of an Aristoi's psyche to advise and aid whenever necessary. This was less believable but intriguing nonetheless. The Aristoi can converse with these daimones quite intelligently and command them to do simple tasks like retrieving information from the central computer called the Hyperlogos, or modifying bodily parameters like heart rate or temperature. These conversations take place internally while the Aristos goes on with other actions or conversations in the real world.
In addition, the Aristos may simultaneously be present in a virtual world through the Hyperlogos, meeting with other Aristoi who are physically many light years away. When this happens, the Aristos gives command of his physical body over to one of his/her daimones. Apparently, even an Aristos can't perform complex actions in both worlds simultaneously.
Well it's definitely worth reading, a good airplane book. But like me you might end up feeling a bit let down that the story wasn't continued over a few more novels. Epic concepts like these deserve an epic story to go with them.
The Aristoi -- singular Aristos or Ariste -- are the kings and queens of the future, shaping and ruling their domaines (sic) as they see fit. The therápontes serve the Arisoi, and the Demos -- the general population -- are below the therápontes. They are aided by their daemons, or alternate facets of their own psyche that manifest as unique personalities. The Aristoi are the unimpeachable rulers of creation, granted the right to use, modify, and deploy nanotechnolgy to suit their will. After Earth suffers a Grey Goo death -- called Mataglap and classified by various characteristics -- nano is restricted only to the highest echelons of society. Nanotechnolgy is heavily featured throughout the book, and its use (and abuse) is a central theme.
Anyone can dive into the Hyperlogos -- the interconnected network based inside the shell of Earth²'s moon -- and coexist both in the real world and in the Hyperlogos simultaneously. They can allow their daemons to control their body, or their Skiagenos, or avatar within the Hyperlogos. Aristos Gabriel, our protagonist, does this once within the book to be intimate with two people at the same time. The book is occasionally formatted with two columns, to represent the real world and the Hyperlogos. This technique is extremely effective at demonstrating the passage of time. (The e-book, unfortunately, has no such formatting, and it is more difficult to tell when events are happening in sequence or simultaneously.)
Gabriel is known as one of the top Aristoi (of course). He controls a small but dominant region of space, turning most of the planets under his rule into artistic utopias. During a graduation celebration for new Aristoi, he is roped into a suspected conspiracy: the seal of the Hyperlogos, the most sacred of all encryption, has been broken. Information is being destroyed and hidden away, which (in Williams' truly open society) is paramount to blasphemy. Aristos Gabriel must investigate the irregularities found in the Hyperlogos, and pray he can save the whole of the galaxy.
The writing style is both simplistic enough to understand, but detailed for the technically-minded. The introduction of several new words and terms, and occasional unexplained term (which just has to be figured out in context) can be a stumbling block, but the struggle is well worth the ride.
Aristoi is one of the best speculative science fiction novels I have ever read. Asimov, Clarke, Heinlein, and Herbert have their place in my literary world. Williams stands alone.


