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Book Club Guide
FACTORING HUMANITY
by Robert J. Sawyer
Many reading groups and book clubs have enjoyed novels by Robert J. Sawyer.
The following questions may help stimulate an interesting
discussion about Factoring Humanity. (These
questions might also suggest essay topics for students
studying the book.)
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Note that these questions reveal much of the novel's plot; to
preserve your reading pleasure, please don't look at these questions
until after you've finished reading the book.
- At the beginning of the novel, Kyle Graves is accused by his
adult daughter Rebecca of having abused her and her sister as
children. It's only much later that Kyle's wife, Heather Davis,
discover the truth. At what point did you decide whether Kyle
was innocent or guilty? Heather is torn between her love for her
husband and her love for her daughter. Kyle says he is innocent,
but Becky says he is guilty. In such a case in your own family,
who would you initially believe: your spouse, or your child?
- Factoring Humanity deals in part with recovered
memories of childhood abuse. Do you believe that real memories
can be suppressed? Do you think that false memories can be
implanted? At the end of the novel, Kyle seems to forgive his
daughters' therapist, Lydia Gurdjieff. Would you forgive under
such circumstances?
- The artificial-intelligence program Cheetah is one of the most
popular characters in the novel. In his attempts to be human,
Cheetah tries to master both humor and the ability to make moral
judgments. Are these really the things that separate us from
machines? Was Cheetah making real progress before he committed
suicide? In the case that most vexed Cheetah whether the
pregnant, devoutly Catholic, comatose woman who had been raped
should have her baby or not what decision would you have made
had you been the woman's parents? Sawyer didn't make up this
case; it really happened. Is mixing fact and fiction in this way
appropriate?
- Heather Davies gets to surf the collective memories of all of
humanity. She plugs into several historical characters who
interest her, including Abraham Lincoln, Jesus Christ, and John
T. Scopes (of the famous 1925 Tennessee evolution trial). If you
had the same opportunity, whose minds would you explore? Heather
and Kyle eventually access each other's minds. Would you want to
access your own spouse's mind? Could your marriage survive that?
- Some reviewers have noted superficial similarities between the
novel Factoring Humanity and the movie
Contact. The movie was released after Sawyer had
finished writing Factoring Humanity, and the
original novel Contact (which has a group of five
scientists traveling in the alien machine, instead of just one)
bears fewer resemblances to Sawyer's book than does the movie.
Still, for those who have seen the movie Contact,
or read Carl Sagan's novel upon which the movie was based, how
close do you think the similarities are? Who is a more
sympathetic and interesting protagonist, Sawyer's Heather Davis,
or Sagan's Eleanor Arroway (played by Jodie Foster in the movie)?
- Sawyer seems to believe that twentieth-century pop culture will
endure into the twenty-first century. The book contains
references to I Love Lucy and Salvador Dali (from
the 1950s), the original Star Trek (from the
1960s), Star Wars (from the 1970s), Star Trek
II: The Wrath of Khan (from the 1980s), and
Seinfeld and mystery writer Mary Higgins Clark
(from the 1990s). Will anyone care about any of this in the
years to come? Or is pop culture, by its very nature, utterly
ephemeral? If not, what parts of 20th Century pop culture do you
think will endure into the next century?
- The alien radio message from Epsilon Eridani, encoded on the Huneker
disk, suggests that humanity should proceed with great caution in
creating artificial intelligence. Do you agree? Or do you
agree, as others have held (such as Christopher Dewdney, in his
1998 non-fiction book Last Flesh), that humanity's
destiny is to create its own silicon-based successors? (By the
way, a picture of the decoded Epsilon Indi message is available
on Sawyer's web site at
www.sfwriter.com/fhalien.htm.)
- Several privacy issues are raised in Factoring
Humanity: quantum computers threaten the security of
encrypted data; the therapist Lydia Gurdjieff discusses Becky's
case (albeit without identifying her by name) with another
"patient" (Becky's mother, masquerading as a patient); and access
to the overmind makes it possible to plug into anyone's thoughts
and feelings, even the privacy of the dead is eliminated there
is no such thing in the novel as taking a secret to your grave.
Do these issues concern you? Are we doomed to lose our privacy
in the years to come? How would it affect business
relationships? How would it affect national security?
-
The novel's conclusion proposes that empathy the ability to
feel what others are feeling is the most important human
characteristic. Do you agree? In the book, the human race's
empathic ability is related to the concept of the overmind. Is
it plausible that we're all linked in a higher dimension? Do you
find that idea soothing or frightening?
- Rob Sawyer is a science-fiction writer and, as such, he has written
many non-human characters (including even a trilogy of novels
Far-Seer, Fossil Hunter, and Foreigner with no human characters
in them at all). But it's often been said that for male writers
the most alien characters of all are women. The lead character
in Factoring Humanity is a woman, Heather Davis.
Given that the theme of the novel is seeing other people's points
of view, how good a job does Sawyer do at portraying a female
character? How believable is Heather as a scientist? A spouse?
A mother?
More Good Reading
Download this Book Club Guide in Adobe Acrobat Format
More about Factoring Humanity
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Book Club Guide for Hominids
Book Club Guide for Calculating God
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