FlyingPasta
FlyingPasta t1_jdi9jjx wrote
Reply to comment by hogwildwilly in As a newbie to sci-fi, reading complicated sci-fi is making my brain hurt, but it's also really enjoyable. by justkeepbreathing94
I’ll say if you’re a physics “hobbyist” of any kind it flows. I watch surface level videos on quantum and astrophysics and nothing in the book was a slog. Actually extremely enjoyable, he has some very fresh takes on science. There’s an insane part on computer engineering I’ll probably remember forever
And to add to your list of what it does well, there’s a lot of good psychology, on human, community and societal level. The way he fleshes out available options in situations and how decisions are contemplated is crisp and deep. For example the two ships with the resource problem, the humans as a whole facing a problem, and the one man and woman with the immense responsibility come to mind
FlyingPasta t1_jdi80so wrote
Reply to comment by captainblastido in As a newbie to sci-fi, reading complicated sci-fi is making my brain hurt, but it's also really enjoyable. by justkeepbreathing94
It builds up a lot of contexts. Like the beginning is dedicated to learning math stuff for example. It can often feel like a textbook, but it’s good if you like to learn
FlyingPasta OP t1_jaes9r7 wrote
Reply to comment by Deferential_dreams in [No spoilers] The dialogue in The Brothers Karamazov is giving me whiplash by FlyingPasta
I’ve got the penguin classics edition, already had it so it was too late to pick the best. I did get P&V’s Crime and Punishment though :)
FlyingPasta OP t1_jadq1rj wrote
Reply to comment by Deferential_dreams in [No spoilers] The dialogue in The Brothers Karamazov is giving me whiplash by FlyingPasta
Agh yeah u fortunately the goofyness seems to get lost in the confusion, although couple parts did make me chuckle.
Gotta grow some chest hair and read it in Russian, just that my reading level has fallen to around grade 4 probably (or fourth class of gymnasium as they’d say)
FlyingPasta OP t1_jadpqup wrote
Reply to comment by BinstonBirchill in [No spoilers] The dialogue in The Brothers Karamazov is giving me whiplash by FlyingPasta
Thanks! Yeah I’ve heard about the last minute reprieve, how that affects a person must be nuts.
Definitely going to search up that movie!
FlyingPasta OP t1_jadphoj wrote
Reply to comment by brief_interviews in [No spoilers] The dialogue in The Brothers Karamazov is giving me whiplash by FlyingPasta
This is a really good insight, thank you!
FlyingPasta OP t1_jadbo4y wrote
Reply to comment by stavigoodbye in [No spoilers] The dialogue in The Brothers Karamazov is giving me whiplash by FlyingPasta
I vaguely suspected this too, thanks
FlyingPasta OP t1_jad4320 wrote
Reply to comment by bonsai_skinnydip33 in [No spoilers] The dialogue in The Brothers Karamazov is giving me whiplash by FlyingPasta
Yeah it’s fun for sure
FlyingPasta OP t1_jad40eh wrote
Reply to comment by fckuse in [No spoilers] The dialogue in The Brothers Karamazov is giving me whiplash by FlyingPasta
If that’s the reason then that’s the reason, just making sure I’m not missing anything 😛
Submitted by FlyingPasta t3_11e85y9 in books
FlyingPasta t1_jabrxlh wrote
Reply to comment by silverandamericard in Question about chapters titled with a person's name and first person narrative. by Ginaccc
Another old example is Brothers Karamazov, although it was a tad later. Dostoyevsky is a bit less rigid with the POVs but they’re definitely distinct enough
FlyingPasta t1_jabrt3n wrote
Reply to comment by Booksandbeer55 in Does this mean audiobooks aren't for me? by IAmNotAFetish
Agreed re learned skill. I think most people pigeonhole themselves saying so and so doesn’t vibe with them, but it’s likely that their brain is just new to it and needs to habituate
That said, I can’t hang onto an audio narrative to save my life and it would likely take a lot of practice to do so
FlyingPasta t1_iy97san wrote
Reply to comment by mycleverusername in What’s up with Goodreads recommendations? by kevsfamouschili
It's not necessarily insidious but it's not fear-mongering either. Substantial reason many apps exist is to scrape data and sell it. It is a constant invasion of any data they can get their hands on, and only recently have there been efforts (by Apple mostly) to fight back against it by giving you notices when apps are tracking location, adding "ask app not to track" popups (for tracking data across other apps !!), etc
At one point a friend of mine looked up his google data, it could literally tell when you lay down, when you lay down and are on your phone, location history, etc. Right now it's all commercial and I do admit I don't much care, but our phones are basically little spy implants.
Kind of a tangential rant. I also use GR just for keeping tracks of books, TBR and such.
FlyingPasta t1_jdpq3ck wrote
Reply to comment by hogwildwilly in As a newbie to sci-fi, reading complicated sci-fi is making my brain hurt, but it's also really enjoyable. by justkeepbreathing94
Yeah it didn’t have clearly defined morality, just groups fighting for resources or conquest. Gravity waves were for propulsion iirc and how they discovered FTL, like that demo the woman did in the bathtub with the soap and water. The coolest part imo was how they played with the dimensions and sizing of subatomic particles if you remember that, or the spying mechanism using quantum-entangled light speed particles. How the “dark forest” theory was fleshed out made scary amount of sense. Very fresh as far as the sci in scifi goes, much different from the usual tired “are robots really alive??” tropes and such.