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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot introduction  





2 Characters  





3 Plot  





4 Critical reception  





5 References  





6 External links  














The Terminal Experiment






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The Terminal Experiment
First edition (paperback)
AuthorRobert J. Sawyer
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherHarper Prism

Publication date

May 1995
Publication placeCanada
Media typePrint (Hardcover & Paperback)
Pages333
ISBN0-06-105310-4
OCLC32448141

The Terminal Experiment is a science fiction novel by Canadian writer Robert J. Sawyer. The book won the 1995 Nebula Award for Best Novel,[1] and was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1996.[2] Sawyer received a writer's reserve grant from the Ontario Arts Council in 1993 in support of his writing the novel.[3]

The story was first serialised in Analog magazine in the mid-December 1994 to March 1995 issues, under the name Hobson's Choice, before its first novel publication in May, 1995. A Hobson's choice is an apparently free choice that is really no choice at all. In this book it is a play on the main character's name and describes the choice between immortality and provable life after death.

Plot introduction

[edit]

Dr. Peter Hobson invents a machine that detects a brain pattern that leaves the body after death, a pattern many believe is a soul. In order to test their theories on immortality and life after death, Hobson and his friend Sarkar Muhammed create three electronic simulations of Hobson's own personality. When people Hobson had a grudge against begin to die, he and Sarkar must try to find out which is responsible. But all three simulations – two modified, one a "control" – escape Sarkar's computer, into the Internet and the World Wide Web.

Characters

[edit]

Plot

[edit]

The novel takes place in Toronto, briefly in 1995 and chiefly in 2011. Dr. Peter Hobson, a biomedical engineer, has invented many devices in the field of home automation. He has always been haunted by memories of monitoring an EKG during the dissection of a "corpse" for organ donation when he was in graduate school; the donor's heart was still beating and the body exhibited signs of anesthesia awareness. Now, Peter devises what he calls a superEEG in order to determine the exact moment when all electrical energy ceases in the brain; he wants to precisely "determine that someone is dead before they begin carving out his organs."[4]

Peter is hurt and angry when his beloved wife, Cathy, admits that she had sex with Hans Larsen, whom neither of them respects. A psychotherapist helps her to understand that she has low self-esteem because of emotional neglect by her critical father Rod. Peter throws himself into his work. This is the emotional set-up that drives events in the following five months.

To his shock, when Peter places his superEEG on the head of a willing terminal patient, he afterwards finds in the readouts a small electrical field leaving the brain after death. He shares this discovery with his friend Sarkar Muhammed, who runs his own startup firm doing expert system design. Sarkar declares it a soul, which Peter, a skeptic, is reluctant to believe. To maintain precise scientific language, they call it a soulwave: "The soulwave had a distinctive electrical signature. The frequency was very high, well above that of normal electrochemical brain activity, so, even though the voltage was minuscule, it wasn't washed out in the mass of other signals within the brain."[5]

Peter experiments with more terminal patients to verify his finding; he tests pregnant women to discover when the fetus gains a soulwave (at about ten weeks); and he finds that, among animals, at least chimpanzees also have souls.

When Peter holds a press conference to announce his breakthrough, human society around the world undergoes a revolution. He is repeatedly asked what life after death is like, though he has no idea.

"I can't rely on the Koran, or the Bible, or anything else. All we know is that a cohesive energy field survives the death of the body. Whether that field lasts for any appreciable time after departure, or whether it carries any real information, is completely unknown—and any other interpretation at this point is just wishful thinking."[6]

In order to learn about immortality and life after death, Peter and Sarkar create three electronic simulations of Peter's own personality after a comprehensive scan of his mind and memories. From one, they seek "which neural nets are activated exclusively by biological concerns, and then zero those out" (p. 131), so that it is purely intellect; they call it Spirit. From the second, they edit all fears of aging and death, so that it "feels" itself to be immortal; they call this one Ambrotos. The third is a control, with Peter's knowledge up to the point of the brain scan. At first, the three "sims" enjoy exploring all that the Internet has to offer. One sim, however, hires a hit man to kill Hans and then, days later, Cathy's father.

Detective Sandra Philo takes the case and, questioning Cathy and her co-workers, realizes at once that Cathy is concealing her relationship with Hans. She also knows Peter is rich enough to afford hiring a professional hit. What she doesn't realize is that the guilty sim is prepared to have her killed, too. Peter and Sarkar race to find a way to "pull the plug" on the sims before Philo and perhaps others die.

Critical reception

[edit]

Besides winning the Nebula Award, The Terminal Experiment won the Prix Aurora Award for Best Long Form in English of 1995.[7] It also earned one of the nine HOMer Awards that Sawyer has won.[8] The novel was a Preliminary Nominee for the Bram Stoker Award, for Superior Achievement in a Novel, and was nominated for the Science Fiction Chronicle Award.[7]

Brian Stableford wrote in an overview: "Sawyer's work became conspicuously more ambitious in the late 1990s. The Terminal Experiment (1995) has a murder mystery subplot, but foregrounds an enquiry into the roots of ethical philosophy, employing three artificial 'clones' of its protagonist's personality as subjects in an elaborate thought experiment."[9]

Steven H Silver wrote, "Sawyer is writing a mystery with this book, and, to a certain extent, succeeds. The pace is good, keeping you turning the pages, and the characters are likeable, even the libidinous Hans and the un-enlightened Rod. However, because of the way Sawyer creates his mystery, there is no real chance of figuring out who is responsible."[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "1995 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-09-17.
  • ^ "1996 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-09-17.
  • ^ Amy Elisabeth Fuller, ed. (2009). "Sawyer, Robert J. 1960–". Contemporary Authors, New Revision Series, Vol. 184. Detroit: Gale. pp. 315–323.
  • ^ Sawyer, Robert J. (1995). The Terminal Experiment. New York: HarperPrism. p. 16. ISBN 0-06-105310-4.
  • ^ Sawyer, Robert J. (1995). The Terminal Experiment. New York: HarperPrism. p. 89. ISBN 0-06-105310-4.
  • ^ Sawyer, Robert J. (1995). The Terminal Experiment. New York: HarperPrism. p. 82. ISBN 0-06-105310-4.
  • ^ a b Von Ruff, Al. "The Terminal Experiment". Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
  • ^ Kelly, Mark R. "LOCUS Index to SF Awards, HOMer Nominees List". Locus. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
  • ^ Brian Stableford (2006). "Sawyer, Robert J[ames] (1960– )". Science Fact and Science Fiction: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. p. 460.
  • ^ Silver, Steven H. "The Terminal Experiment". sfsite.com. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Terminal_Experiment&oldid=1124802567"

    Categories: 
    1995 science fiction novels
    1995 Canadian novels
    Novels by Robert J. Sawyer
    Nebula Award for Best Novel-winning works
    Canadian science fiction novels
    Fiction set in 2011
    Novels first published in serial form
    Works originally published in Analog Science Fiction and Fact
    Novels set in Toronto
    Hidden categories: 
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