Blindsight (Firefall, #1)

384 pages

English language

Published March 19, 2006

ISBN:
9780765312181
Goodreads:
48484

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5 stars (2 reviews)

Blindsight is a hard science fiction novel by Canadian writer Peter Watts, published by Tor Books in 2006. It won the Seiun Award for best translated novel and was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novel, the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel, and the Locus Award for Best Science Fiction Novel. The story follows a crew of astronauts sent out as the third wave, following two series of probes, to investigate a trans-Neptunian Kuiper belt comet dubbed "Burns-Caulfield" that has been found to be transmitting an unidentified radio signal to an as-yet unknown destination elsewhere in the Solar System, followed by their subsequent first contact. The novel explores themes of identity, consciousness, free will, artificial intelligence, neurology, and game theory as well as evolution and biology. Blindsight is available online under a Creative Commons license. Its sequel (or "sidequel"), Echopraxia, came out in 2014.

2 editions

reviewed Blindsight (Firefall, #1) by Peter Watts

The uncertainty of first contact, amid the uncertainty of human contact.

4 stars

Content warning Mildly spoilery review, no details

Give me more!

5 stars

What readers love about AIs is that they often really want to understand humans and thus, observe them closely, and register all their body language signals etc. But we have no idea if an AI would be interested in humans. It's just good for human readers if it does.

In this book, Watts does something similar but without AI: there is this person who's lost half their brain by accident, so in order to understand humans, this person needs to observe them very closely and detect all their signals. Unlike we "normal humans" who get these signals subconsciously, this person evaluates all the signals consciously, right before our reading eyes. This was what I liked the most.

But the rest of the story is absolutely great, too. How the aliens move unseen etc. I really like Peter Watts and damn! Just accept the vampire because it's cool and makes sense …