



Permutation City
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4.4 • 86 Ratings
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- $3.99
Publisher Description
Paul Durham keeps making Copies of himself: software simulations of his own brain and body which can be run in virtual reality, albeit seventeen times more slowly than real time. He wants them to be his guinea pigs for a set of experiments about the nature of artificial intelligence, time, and causality, but they keep changing their mind and bailing out on him, shutting themselves down.
Maria Deluca is an Autoverse addict; she's unemployed and running out of money, but she can't stop wasting her time playing around with the cellular automaton known as the Autoverse, a virtual world that follows a simple set of mathematical rules as its “laws of physics”.
Paul makes Maria a very strange offer: he asks her to design a seed for an entire virtual biosphere able to exist inside the Autoverse, modelled right down to the molecular level. The job will pay well, and will allow her to indulge her obsession. There has to be a catch, though, because such a seed would be useless without a simulation of the Autoverse large enough to allow the resulting biosphere to grow and flourish — a feat far beyond the capacity of all the computers in the world.
Customer Reviews
Thought Provoking
This book is a great read about future virtual realities and artificial intelligence. There are a ton of thought provoking ideas that the author explores. The story and technology in the book has held up remarkably well even though it was written in the 90s.
Tegmark's Hypothesis Fictionalized...
... Except that I believe this predates Max Tegmark's "Ultimate ensemble theory of everything". Anyway, this really a very touching exploration of the idea that math powers "the" universe (and all others beside), combining hard sci-fi and very real human characters. This is probably going to make it into my Top-5 favorite books ever.