Iain Banks: The Culture is Inevitable

My favorite author of all time, Iain Banks, has an interview over at Salon.

Salon: But you've also written that something like the Culture may happen not as a result of individual, or even societal choice, but as a consequence of advances in technology. Ian: In the purest sense, you get to the Culture almost whether you like it or not. But it does involve getting out to space, and it does involve just a huge amount of manufacturing capability. Because what you end up with is entities, space ships or whatever, that become self-sufficient and free moving in space, and it's very hard to keep effective control of them.

The control a state can exercise is largely about the fact it can just go and get you if you are holed up in your ranch in Waco or wherever. It can surround you and attack you and go in and get you. That is going to be impossible when people can live in space or more or less anywhere. Once that becomes the case, the very idea of the state does start to wither away. But it does all eventually go back to technology. Technology determines the possibilities of society. So as technology progresses, the idea of something like the Culture is almost inevitable.
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This page contains a single entry by Paul published on February 20, 2005 5:35 PM.

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