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Paths to Otherwhere [Mass Market Paperback]

James P. Hogan
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 10 pages
  • Publisher: Baen Books; Reissue edition (Jan 1997)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0671877674
  • ISBN-13: 978-0671877675
  • Product Dimensions: 17 x 10.7 x 2.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,615,592 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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James P. Hogan
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Product Description

Synopsis

IN

From the Author

Origin and possibilities of the concept.
The Many Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics is a godsend to s.f. writers looking for a theoretical basis to build an alternative-world story on. I used it myself for The Proteus Operation But it was David Deutsch, a quantum physicist at Oxford University, who persuaded me that the MWI was actually real.

We met for dinner one night in London, introduced by a mutual friend, and the conversation soon got around to Many Worlds. Where the MWI made sense, and all the other interpretations that physicists had been arguing about for the best part of a century didn't, was explaining those paradoxes in all the textbooks, where, for example, a basic particle like a photon or electron appears to achieve the impossible feat of interfering with itself. According to David, what the particle was actually interfering with was not itself, in "the" universe, but its counterpart in one of innumerable adjacent universes. And in similar fashion, all of the comparable "paradoxes" rapidly unraveled.

What this says is that nearby universes interfere with each other at the quantum level. In other words, information can leak between them. It suggested a whole new realm of possibility in the treatment of parallel universes. Instead of somehow transporting somebody into some other reality, we can play with the idea of information percolating through. Perhaps, for example, the abilities that set humans apart as a creative species--such faculties as intuition, anticipation, imagination--stem from a unique ability of the human nervous system to extract and "decode" such signals. (Not so far- fetched, really. If apparatus as crude as bits of glass and metal can make quantum events observable macroscopically, why not a neural quantum-change detector coupled to a cerebral amplifying mechanism capable of delivering intelligible results to consciousness? After all, every nerve ending in the retina detects photons.)

Or suppose, for example, that experimenting with this new physics created situations where the flow of perceptions being experienced by an individual came not from his own body but diverted from a counterpart personality in a nearby but different reality. In that event, as the subject "tuned into" other versions of himself progressively "farther away," he would have the curious experience of finding himself among people who disagreed more and more about what the past was. Eventually, as the process becomes better understood, we achieve the capability of experiencing, through distant other "selves," totally different realities with circumstances unlike anything we imagined, each the result of history following a different course.

Suppose that our own reality were a pretty dismal affair, and we stumbled on one that was a lot more appealing. Would we be able to migrate there permanently somehow? If so, what would happen to the personalities that occupy the versions of ourselves who dwell there naturally? Might we become the "monsters" from some other realm who move in and take people over? --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
By Mark Klobas TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Mass Market Paperback
James P. Hogan's novel starts out in a world heading towards crisis. In a not-too-distant future, the United States is slowly rotting from within, with revolutionaries and gangs forcing an increasingly authoritarian reaction from the government. As an increasingly likely conflict with Japan and China looms, scientists develop a device that heralds the prospect of improving decision-making by allowing users to tap into the infinite number of decisions made by their multitude of counterparts in alternate worlds, thus discovering the wisest course of action. But then the scientists discover a means of transporting a person's consciousness into their counterpart in another universe. As the scientists begin to explore the possibilities, though, the military prepares to move in and use the device for their own ends.

Like his earlier novel The Proteus Operation, Hogan provides a plot of considerable interest, one well grounded in scientific theory as befitting an author of hard SF. Yet character development is lost amid the considerable political commentating the author continually engages in, as he uses his premise to both offer his theory on the failings of our world (too much government) and construct an idyllic alternative that in which everything is perfect (thanks to limited government). Some of it is laughable (as in how Britain manages to have socialized medicine WITHOUT government), much of it demonstrates a poor understanding of human history, and all of it gets in the way of the suspense Hogan attempts to build throughout the novel. It makes for an annoying read, one that would have been better is there had been less of Hogan's political views and more focus on the characters and some of the interesting implications of his premise.
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By A Customer
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I sat down yesterday afternoon to start in on

_Paths to Otherwhere_, and ended up finishing it

hours later. I couldn't put it down. Hogan uses

ideas on multiple universes (alternate realities)

plausibly to create a intriguing story. The main

stream of the story lies in the characters desire

(and conflict in trying) to get away from the

political conspiring and social stratification

that they must work in. Simple research in

evolution turns into complex cross universe

scheming to find something close to utopia.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Mind boggling! 29 Aug 1998
By A Customer
Format:Mass Market Paperback
It was the twenty - first century. The nations of the world headed toward war, and this time it looked as though there was no chance of avoiding a mutually geneocidal cataclysm. However, a small group of scientists had made QUADAR.

QUADAR was a machine. Selected scientists worked quietly on the project, unknown that they were watched by the government. Theory is that anything that COULD happen HAS happened in some universe, some where. There are thousands of universes though. QUADAR sent the selected few to their counter parts in other universes to see what the differences were. Every universe had the same people, but historical events had happened differently. The current world was different. Then there was a world where they never happened at all! Traveling this way was soon called going to otherwheres.

Now the government is ready to steal the whole project for political reasons.

***Mind boggling! A roller coaster of possibilities. Made me stop and think about several "What ifs?"***

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