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D'abord il y a les enchairés, ceux qui s'approchent le plus, sans doute, de ce que fut homo sapiens. Vivant au coeur des jungles terriennes et des océans, leur corps de chair et d'os est mortel, mais leur génome modifié leur assure une longévité exceptionnelle. Sur la Lune et divers astéroïdes sont les gleisners, créatures composites, androïdes, un alliage de chair et de métal potentiellement immortel. Enfin, dans les entrailles chromées de superordinateurs au potentiel de calcul inimaginable, vivent les citoyens des polis, personnalités numérisées, libérées de toute contrainte charnelle, entre les murs intangibles de cités sans limites... Nous sommes à la fin du XXXe siècle, et l'humanité est tripartite. C'est le temps des prodiges, le temps de tous les possibles. Jusqu'à ce qu'un déluge de rayons gamma, reliquat d'une lointaine catastrophe stellaire, menace de stériliser la Terre. Sonne alors l'heure du grand départ. La Diaspora. Mais pour où ? Et comment ? Et voilà que tout à coup le temps presse...
Né à Perth en 1961, Greg Egan est considéré comme le pape mondial de la hard SF, et le plus fascinant des romanciers démiurges. Avec Diaspora, vertige SF inégalé, il signe l'une des pierres de touche de la science-fiction contemporaine, un roman étalon sans pareil dont il aura fallu attendre la traduction française plus de vingt ans.
« Greg Egan est le plus important auteur de SF du XXIe siècle » Stephen Baxter -
Dix-huit récits vertigineux...Un monument de la SF moderne...Des drogues qui brouillent la réalité et provoquent la conjonction des possibles. Des perroquets génétiquement améliorés qui jouent En attendant Godot. Des milliardaires élaborant des chimères, mi-hommes mi-animaux, pour assouvir leurs passions esthétiques. Des femmes qui accueillent dans leur ventre le cerveau de leur mari le temps de reconstruire son corps. Des enlèvements pratiqués sur des répliques mémorielles de personnalités humaines. Des fous de Dieu inventant un virus sélectif reléguant le SIDA au rang de simple grippe. Des implants cérébraux altérant suffisamment la personnalité pour permettre à quiconque de se transformer en tueur...Greg Egan bâtit son futur en disséquant le présent avec une virtuosité aussi fascinante qu'implacable : nous voici prévenus...Australien né à Perth en 1961, Greg Egan publie sa première nouvelle en 1983. Vingt années, six romans et une soixantaine de nouvelles plus tard, il est unanimement considéré comme l'auteur de science-fiction le plus novateur de sa génération. Une notoriété qui n'infléchit pas le caractère discret de l'auteur, dont on sait peu de choses. II confie toutefois avoir pris, suite à la sortie de son roman Schild's Ladder en 2002, quelque distance avec l'écriture et ses fonctions de programmeur afin de se consacrer à l'aide aux réfugiés. Période de mise en retrait désormais révolue, puisqu'il travaille à l'heure actuelle sur son septième roman, Incandescence.Axiomatique est sans conteste le recueil de SF le plus incontournable de la décennie 90. Annoncé en France depuis près de dix ans, sa présente publication en intégralité est un événement majeur. Axiomatique sera suivi par deux autres volumes, l'ensemble de ces trois tomes constituant à terme une intégrale raisonnée des nouvelles de l'auteur unique au monde.Traductions revues et harmonisées par QUARANTE-DEUX
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Nasim is a young computer scientist, hoping to work on the Human Connectome Project: a plan to map every neural connection in the human brain. But funding for the project is cancelled, and Nasim ends up devoting her career to Zendegi, a computerised virtual world used by millions of people.
Fifteen years later, a revived Connectome Project has published a map of the brain. Zendegi is facing fierce competition from its rivals, and Nasim decides to exploit the map to fill the virtual world with better Proxies: the bit-players that bring its crowd scenes to life. As controversy rages over the nature and rights of the Proxies, a friend with terminal cancer begs Nasim to make a Proxy of him, so some part of him will survive to help raise his orphaned son. But Zendegi is about to become a battlefield ... -
Immortality can be yours . . . at a price
Permutation city is the tale of a man with a vision - how to create immortality - and how that vision becomes grows beyond his control. Encompassing the lives and struggles of an artificial life junkie desperate to save her dying mother, a billionaire banker scarred by a terrible crime, the lovers for whom, in their timeless virtual world, love is not enough - and much more - Permutation city is filled with the sense of wonder and dread.
Can what makes you human be distilled into data? And what happens if you can't afford to pay?
Readers are having their minds blown by PERMUTATION CITY:
"Egan tells the story masterfully. I can only marvel at how he finds his inspiration for a high-tech tale in an ancient wisdom like Kabbalah, and then proceeds to out-Kabbalah even the Kabbalists with his creativity" - Goodreads reviewer, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
"Egan questions what it really means to be human in a way that it's quite unsurpassed in my mind" - Goodreads reviewer, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
"THIS is why I read SF. THIS is the sense of wonder I'm looking for in a SF story. Forget everything you read about virtual reality, artificial life & consciousness - nothing compares to the concepts and the worldbuilding in this book. This is ultimate postcyberpunk ever" - Goodreads reviewer, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
"I can say without qualification that Greg Egan is the greatest science fiction author I've ever read" - Goodreads reviewer, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ -
Greg Egan is arguably Australia's greatest living science fiction writer. In a career spanning more than thirty years, he has produced a steady stream of novels and stories that address a wide range of scientific and philosophical concerns: artificial intelligence, higher mathematics, science vs religion, the nature of consciousness, and the impact of technology on the human personality. All these ideas and more find their way into this generous and illuminating collection, the clear product of a man who is both a master storyteller and a rigorous, exploratory thinker.
The Best of Greg Egan contains twenty stories and novellas arranged in chronological order, and each of them is a brilliantly conceived, painstakingly developed gem, including the Hugo Award-winning novella "Oceanic", a powerful account of a boy whose deeply held religious beliefs are undermined by what he comes to learn about the laws of the physical world.
This book really does represent the best of Greg Egan, and it therefore takes its place among the best of contemporary SF. Startling, intelligent and always hugely entertaining, it provides an ideal introduction to one of the most accomplished and original writers working today. This is an important and provocative collection, and it deserves a place on the serious science fiction reader's permanent shelf. -
THE HUNDRED LIGHT YEAR DIARY - Scientists can bounce messages from the future back to the present, but there's no guarantee they'll tell the truth ...
LEARNING TO BE ME - Crystalline minds may take the place of human brains, but where does the self really lie?
CLOSER - Lovers exchange bodies and minds, but their experiments go just that little bit too far, proving that you can have too much of a good thing -
Deux représentants d'une civilisation galactique très avancée sont envoyés sur un monde lointain afin de récupérer les découvertes extraordinaires léguées par une espèce éteinte depuis un million d'années. Mais ceux qui dominent cette planète à présent ont des ambitions qui risquent de contrecarrer leur mission.
Combinant mathématiques et astrophysique avec un sens profond de l'Histoire, l'australien Greg Egan donne ici une démonstration éblouissante de son talent comme écrivain de la hard science. -
The generation ship Peerless is suffering from a population explosion, and the only way to reduce the number of children is by drastically limiting the females' food intake. So population control consists of two barbaric choices: starvation, or suicide.
Trying to find a better way, a biologist starts experimenting with animals, and stumbles on a technique that radically alters the reproductive cycle. But while the advantages are obvious, there's a major drawback: while it spares women from their old role - reproduction without hope of survival - it will essentially wipe out an entire sex.
Amid the turmoil created by this new possibility, physicists on the ship are working to develop the technology they will need to complete the mission of the Peerless. One of the expedition's founders dreamed of discovering the Eternal Flame: a way to generate thrust without consuming any fuel at all.
The inhabitants on board the Peerless have some hard choices to make - and the wrong one could spell extinction for their entire race. -
In an alien universe where space and time play by different rules, interstellar voyages last longer for the travellers than for those they left behind. After six generations in flight, the inhabitants of the mountain-sized spacecraft the Peerless have used their borrowed time to develop advanced technology that could save their home world from annihilation.
But not every traveller feels allegiance to a world they have never seen, and as tensions mount over the risks of turning the ship around and starting the long voyage home, a new complication arises: the prospect of constructing a messaging system that will give the Peerless news of its own future.
While some of the crew welcome the opportunity to be warned of impending dangers - and perhaps even hear reports of the ship's triumphant return - others are convinced that knowing what lies ahead will be oppressive, and that the system will be abused. Agata longs for a chance to hear a message from the ancestors back on the home world, proving that the sacrifices of the travellers have not been in vain, but her most outspoken rival, Ramiro, fears that the system will undermine every decision the travellers make.
When a vote fails to settle the matter and dissent erupts into violence, Ramiro, Agata and their allies must seek a new way to bring peace to the Peerless - by traveling to a world where time runs in reverse.
THE ARROWS OF TIME is the final volume of the Orthogonal trilogy, bringing a powerful and surprising conclusion to the epic story of the Peerless that began with THE CLOCKWORK ROCKET and THE ETERNAL FLAME. -
Cass has stumbled on something that might be an entirely different type of physics, and she's travelled three hundred and fifty light-years to Mimosa Station, a remote experimental facility, to test her theory. The novo-vacuum she creates is predicted to begin decaying the instant it's created, but even so short-lived a microscopic speck could shed new light on the origins of the universe.
But instead of decaying, Cass's novo-vacuum is wildly successful and begins expanding, slowly but inexorably taking over the universe ...
SCHILD'S LADDER: a wild ride through the far future by one of the world's most respected and acclaimed writers. -
LUMINOUS collects together one original story plus nine previously unpublished in book form. Greg Egan's short fiction is at the cutting edge of the genre. His stories range from near future predictions to far future, far space improvisations. His grasp of the latest scientific breakthroughs is unparalleled in science fiction. The stories include 'Transition Dreams', 'Cocoon', 'Our Lady of Chernobyl', the title story 'Luminous' and 'The Planck Drive'. Egan's particular interests range from the farther shores of chaos theory and black hole science to bio-technology and cloning.