E book Evaluation: 2040 by Pedro Domingos

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2040

by Pedro Domingos

Style: Science Fiction / Satire / Humor

ISBN: 9798350963342

Print Size: 226 pages

Reviewed by Nick Rees Gardner

Amusing-out-loud comedy of errors, 2040: A Silicon Valley Satire parodies politics and lampoons our reliance on tech with intelligence and wit.

When Ethan Burnswagger and Arvind Subramanian started their startup, KumbAI, they didn’t foresee the battle it might create between one another, their buddies, or all the United States. 

Whereas their first AI invention, PresiBot, dips within the presidential election polls in opposition to the ersatz-Native American, Raging Bull, the 2 take a look at what drastic measures they may take to be able to win the election and make KumbAI a family identify. 

In opposition to a dystopian Silicon Valley backdrop, Pedro Domingos’s 2040 whips its protagonists via racially segregated ghettos, subterranean laptop servers, and rooftop fundraisers with the trillionaires that run the world in a farce that’s as frighteningly shut as it’s bizarrely humorous.

Professor of Story Science at Ohio State’s Venture Narrative, Dr. Angus Fletcher, calls satire, “psychological novocaine,” in that it “reduces the felt depth of our emotional hurts.” Studying a piece of satire can scale back anxiousness by permitting the reader to mock their very own place in a spot the place they’re unhappy. 

Pedro Domingos exaggerates our present points to the purpose that the reader can’t ignore the ridiculousness of all of it. Take, for instance, the Republican PresiBot, an AI fed to the brink with each political speech, e book, or memo, who resorts to non-answers and misdirects in debates quite than answering necessary political questions. Or, the careless group of trillionaires who share a rooftop dinner that ends in fisticuffs over their particular person carbon footprints. A lot of Domingos’s world revolves round petty squabbles within the rich world whereas unrest and squalor guidelines the streets 300 tales under. No political or social concern is off limits to Domingos, for higher or worse. 

The problem behind any satire is to point out the ridiculousness behind a sure motion or stance with out being heavy-handed, a process which, for probably the most half, Pedro Domingos handles aptly. However relying on the reader and their beliefs, problems with race and of indigeneity and colonization are harped on quite thickly. For instance, when Ethan, a white man, makes an offhand comment in regards to the paucity of range in his area, he’s arrested for not being PC; a farcical joke that rides the road between berating political correctness and an absence of respect for the situations and histories of these not in his place. Equally, Raging Bull, the non-native imposter who claims his ties to the Lakota and wields a tomahawk and feather headdress, seeks presidency in order that he can rid the US of all non-native folks, stating “‘We’ll kill all of them.’” Most, if not all of those statements could be written off as overdramatization, however their flippancy could possibly be a turn-off for sure readers.  

Nonetheless, satire and exaggeration and wild frivolity usually are not the one driving forces of 2040. Whereas the novel follows a standard overreacher plot, facet plots, corresponding to Ethan’s journey into the “Black Sector,” and his subsequent escape from the “Guards” after his unpolitically right remark, add an depth and rigidity that speeds the e book alongside. A love triangle emerges and wreaks havoc and when a band of underground homeless folks dressed as robots insert themselves into the plot, the battle is amped as much as life-or-death, making the e book inconceivable to stop.

With such a fast-paced farce, there is no such thing as a want for lyrical prose. Lengthy stretches of witty back-and-forths tackle a lot of the expositional work and the worldbuilding is delicate, however efficient. Motion drives 2040, and it drives it quick. Pedro Domingos steers the reader to the sting of cause, possibly pushes them over it, and reels them again in shortly with the sobering reminder that the world of 2040 is just not so far-off from our personal. As a satire, 2040 is a sobering reminder packed inside a laughter machine, each thought-provoking and relieving because the reader chuckles off the load of their worries.  


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