Greg Egan is one of those authors who is little known outside his genre (hard sci-fi) and perhaps inscrutable to lay readers, but unforgettable for true fans. Oceanic is a compelling collection that fully justifies Egan’s reputation as the “hardest” hard sci-fi author. Rather than simply stating that “an interstellar probe was sent”, Egan dives into the plausible-yet-fictional physics behind the probe, often in excessive detail.
In another Egan anthology, Axiomatic, the core themes are mind-body dualism and simulated consciousness. Oceanic relegates these concepts to the background – as if digital copies of consciousness are already commonplace – allowing Egan to focus more thematically on AI safety and space travel. It’s a well-constructed collection with a cohesive “cinematic universe,” though each story stands on its own. For example, the synthetic human Helen from Singleton reappears in Oracle, explaining how humanity ends up in synthetic bodies. Induction chronicles Earth’s galactic expansion through “spores” that land in new solar systems and use nanomachines to build infrastructure, ready to receive beamed consciousnesses and load them into new bodies. The story’s title hints at Egan’s suggestion that once this is achieved for one planet, it will soon spread across the galaxy by induction. This groundwork builds toward Riding the Crocodile, Glory, and Hot Rock, which feature a post-scarcity galactic society called the Amalgam. Here, inhabitants can choose to live as digital consciousnesses or inhabit synthetic bodies, freely exploring worlds as they please.
Having said that, the best story in the collection is the standalone Dark Integers. This is Egan at his most creative. Mathematics itself obeys Einstein locality, allowing different parts of the universe to have different mathematical truth. Aliens are involved. It’s wacky, mind-bending, and Hofstadter-coded, and pushes the boundaries of conceptual sci-fi. The same can be said of Egan more generally. But it’s not for the faint of heart!
Synopses
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- Lost Continent: intertemporal religious war sparks intertemporal immigration crisis; a commentary on Australia’s migration policies.
- Dark Integers: Egan at his most creative. Mathematics itself obeys Einstein locality, so different parts of the universe can have different mathematical truth. Alien contact is made by discovering a region of the universe with different mathematical axioms.
- Crystal Nights: a billionaire tries to evolve a new species on a supercomputer. His creation is not as grateful as he expected: they figure out real-world physics and use it to escape.
- Steve Fever: a dying scientist creates an AGI and asks it to revive him. Steve-flavoured paperclip maximisation ensues.
- Induction: a short story about interplanetary colonisation using “orchid seeds” that acquire resources on the new planet, to which you can beam your consciousness.
- Singleton: a scientist, unable to accept the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, invents a way of creating a singleton consciousness who never branches.
- Oracle: a fanciful alternate history in which a traveller from another parallel universe (the synthetic human Helen from Singleton) meets a thinly-veiled Alan Turing, and ushers in rapid technological innovation.
- Border Guards: a mere 10 millennia after humans become immortal and interplanetary, a former mortal struggles to integrate.
- Riding the Crocodile: in a galactic society called the Amalgalm, all the various species live on a common network and share resources, apart from the enigmatic “Aloof ones” living in the central bulge of the galaxy. All attempts to send probes are gently rebuffed. Leila and Jasim, ready for death after ten thousand years of marriage, decide that their final project will be to make contact.
- Glory: species are either seekers (seeking new knowledge) or spreaders (wanting to indoctrinate others). In the Amalgalm, a pair of seekers tries to discover lost mathematics, but spreaders get in the way.
- Hot Rock: an orphan planet full of intelligent lizards, that is “hot” because the ground is some kind of computronium. Good if you like particle physics.
- Oceanic: a strange story about amphibious humans and religion.
Highlights
- Lost Continent
- Dark Integers
- Crystal Nights
- Steve Fever
- Induction
- Singleton
- Oracle
- Border Guards
- Riding the Crocodile
- Glory
- Hot Rock
- Oceanic