Ventus

477 pages

English language

Published 2000 by Tor.

ISBN:
978-0-312-87197-0
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5 stars (1 review)

2 editions

Review of 'Ventus' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

There's a world Ventus, a world created by nanotechnology, ruled by sentient nanotech called Winds that infest every blade of grass and keep the planet stable and earthlike.

The catch (SPOILER WARNING) is that in the process of creating this world, the Winds had to revise their semantic concepts several times over so that they could be up to the task of managing planetary ecology. When the colonists arrived on Ventus, they discovered that the Winds didn't understand them. The Winds are speaking Thalience.

The interesting parts of Ventus (minus the obligatory Vernor Vinge space opera stuff) is that it specifically mentions Wittgenstein's concept of language-games as a prelude to Thalience. Thalience is not simply a language of words and definitions. It is a set of assumptions; the concepts used to speak are used for belief systems as well. Thalience is the operating system and the protocol used by the …

Subjects

  • Life on other planets -- Fiction.