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Transcript

VIII: Density, Devotion, and Disintegration in "The Book of the New Sun" w/ Henry Hale

This week we sat down with our friend Henry Hale, who made the case for his favorite science fiction novel: Gene Wolfe’s The Book of the New Sun. Along the way, we talked about which sci-fi will be remembered, why some fantasy worlds feel “dense”, what gives Catholic its enduring power, and the disintegration of the self. Check it out!

For further context, check out Kevin’s recent article: Gene Wolfe’s ‘The Book of the New Sun’ and the Quest for Timeless Sci-Fi!

EPISODE TIMESTAMPS

00:00:27 - What causes sci-fi works to last and what causes them to fade away?

00:00:32 - What causes a work of sci-fi to be remembered?

00:03:02 - Is hard / technical sci-fi dying?

00:04:05 - Is hard sci-fi destined to be more decentralized than other parts of the genre?

00:04:14 - Hard science can be more similar to hard fantasy than most space operas

00:06:33 - The assumed body of knowledge has shifted a lot over time in both literary and science fiction

00:08:21 - How The Book of the New Sun creates engrossing layers of mystery

00:11:37 - Caves of Qud

00:13:16 - Mother of Learning by nobody103

00:16:39 - The time Gordon unintentionally roasted Kevin freshman year of college by comparing him to Zorian

00:18:09 - "Density" in fantasy novels

00:21:16 - Christian allegory in The Book of the New Sun

00:21:58 - How Catholicism identifies the True, the Good, and the Beautiful

00:23:12 - Is Catholicism interested in finding the truth?

00:24:44 - Introduction to the quasi-religions of rationalism and effective altruism

00:27:44 - The quasi-religious experience of reading the Sequences

00:29:33 - Hating on Buddhism

00:32:07 - There Is No Anti-Memetics Division by qntm

00:35:23 - Conclusion and final recommendations

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