Infinity Gate

, #1

544 pages

English language

Published Dec. 20, 2023 by Orbit.

ISBN:
978-0-316-50438-6
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4 stars (3 reviews)

"The Pandominion: a political and trading alliance of a million worlds. Except that they're really just one world, Earth, in many different realities. And when an A.I. threat arises that could destroy everything the Pandominion has built, they'll eradicate it by whatever means necessary. Scientist Hadiz Tambuwal is looking for a solution to her own Earth's environmental collapse when she stumbles across the secret of inter-dimensional travel, a secret that could save everyone on her dying planet. It leads her into the middle of a war on a scale she never dreamed of. And she needs to choose a side before every reality pays the price."--Provided by publisher.

2 editions

reviewed Infinity Gate by M. R. Carey (Pandeminion, #1)

What if we could have infinite growth?

4 stars

The premise of the book: if the multiverse exists, and a new reality arises every time there's a choice to be made, that means there are infinite branching realities. And if one could easily breach the dimensional barrier, then one could have access to infinite worlds much like one's own, or very different from one's own--with infinite gradations of similarity and difference. When scientist Hadiz Tumbawal discovers a means to hop dimensions, that's her first thought, since her own Earth is dying. But the multiverse is already inhabited by the Pandominion, an alliance of Earths inhabited by bipeds of various lineages, and it turns out that even infinite resources don't obviate the tendency towards conflict.

As he often does, M. R. Carey explores the nature of machine consciousness vs organic consciousness, even suggesting that machine consciousness could evolve without being first created by an organic consciousness. In which case, what …

reviewed Infinity Gate by M. R. Carey (Pandeminion, #1)

lots going on, either too precious or too late for the AI debate.

3 stars

Fast multiverse combat adventure with a bunch of setup for... well, I'm a bit worried about whether this ever went anywhere beyond each next scene, there's a lot of incongruity in what we're shown to care about and what is plausible once the setting simultaneously covers one vs all and all vaguely-humanity vs all synthetic creation.

avatar for jalada@books.hvn.network

rated it

5 stars