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Novel Synopsis
Wake
by Robert J. Sawyer
Copyright © 2009 by Robert J. Sawyer
All Rights Reserved.
Spoiler warning! This is a synopsis of the
entire novel Wake by
Robert J. Sawyer. It's provided here
as a refresher for those who have already read Wake
and are about to read its sequel,
Watch. If you haven't
already read Wake, you
probably don't want to read this synopsis.
Caitlin Decter, 15, blind since birth, has recently moved
to Waterloo, Ontario, from Austin, Texas, with her family. She's
a genius at math and lives most of her social life online, where
she goes by the name "Calculass." Caitlin's blindness is caused
by her retinas failing to properly encode visual information:
the signals they pass back to her optic nerve are garbled in a
way her brain can't decode.
Masayuki Kuroda, an information theorist in Tokyo, emails
Caitlin. He proposes attaching an implant to her left optic
nerve that will beam the garbled signals to a small external
computer pack, where they will be corrected and sent back to the
implant; if the process works, Caitlin will be able to see.
Caitlin is thrilled at the prospect and she and her mother,
Barbara Decter, fly to Tokyo. The implant is installed,
but although Kuroda's system is indeed correcting her
retinal-encoding errors, Caitlin still can't see.
Caitlin begs Kuroda to let her keep the implant and the external
computer pack; she dubs the computer pack her "eyePod." Kuroda
agrees to let her keep the devices for three months. Before
Caitlin returns to Canada he modifies the eyePod so that it will
copy her retinal datastream in real time to his servers in Tokyo,
so he can try to figure out why she's not seeing; he also makes
it possible for him to upload new software from Tokyo into her
implant and the eyePod.
And, shortly after Caitlin gets back to Waterloo, Kuroda does
indeed send her new software and as soon as the upload
begins, Caitlin is overwhelmed by vision! She sees lights,
colors, lines but soon realizes that they don't correspond
to anything in the real world nor do they disappear when
she shuts her eyes. But when the upload is completed and the
connection to Kuroda's computer in Tokyo is broken, Caitlin is
suddenly blind again. Could it be that her strange new vision is
related to being connected to the Web? She thinks to herself,
"Let there be light," and, as she reconnects to the Web, there is
light ...
Meanwhile, in China's rural Shanxi province, there's an outbreak
of a new, virulent strain of bird flu. The Beijing government
decides to execute 10,000 peasants there to contain the spread of
the disease. To prevent Western interpretations of this from
flooding into China and panicking the citizenry, the Chinese
president orders all outside telephone, cell phone, and Internet
access cut off. But Chinese hackers, including a young male
dissident blogger whose online handle is Sinanthropus,
manage to break through, allowing small amounts of contact
between the Chinese portion of the Web and the rest of the
Internet.
Unbeknownst to anyone, a consciousness has begun to emerge in the
infrastructure of the World Wide Web but this sudden
throwing up of the Great Firewall of China has caused it to be
cleaved in two. The interaction between the two parts, through
the holes in the Firewall made by hackers, allows the nascent
intelligence to ramp up its thinking. Recognizing that there is
something other than itself leads to the realization that
it exists. It also becomes aware of past, present, and
future, and it learns to count to three and to begin to think
abstractly. Slowly, but surely, this entity is waking
up ...
Meanwhile, in San Diego, a sign-language-speaking ape named
Hobo participates in the first ever interspecies webcam
call, conversing with an orangutan in Miami. Hobo's handlers
famed primatologist Harl Marcuse and his
27-year-old grad student, Shoshana Glick are
delighted. But the event brings Hobo to the attention of his
rightful owners, the Georgia Zoo and they want him back so
they can sterilize him. Hobo is an accidental chimpanzee-bonobo
hybrid, and the zookeepers are afraid he will taint the
bloodlines of chimps and bonobos, both of which are highly
endangered.
Still in Japan, Dr. Kuroda determines that, incredible though it
seems, Caitlin is indeed seeing a small part of the World Wide
Web's structure. He theorizes that because Caitlin spends so
much time online, her primary visual cortex has been co-opted for
navigating the Web, and now when it is actually receiving data
from the Web via the implant he gave her, it interprets that as
vision.
With the assistance of Anna Bloom, an Internet
cartographer in Israel, Kuroda starts feeding Caitlin the raw
Internet datastream collected by Jagster, an open-source search
engine and suddenly Caitlin goes from seeing just a tiny
part of the Web to seeing the whole thing, in all its
interconnected complexity. Dr. Kuroda flies to Canada to study
this amazing phenomenon.
The Chinese authorities complete the eliminations in Shanxi, and
then restore full communication between the portion of the Web
inside and outside China. The two parts of the emerging entity
consolidate into a new gestalt intelligence, fully self-aware now
and much smarter than before.
This entity learns how to connect to points in the firmament
surrounding it, and discovers that they give up piles of
something in response but what that something is, the
entity has no idea. But after linking to huge numbers of points,
it finds one that, astonishingly, sometimes reflects a view of
itself back at it; without understanding what it has done, the
entity has connected to Caitlin's eyePod, and is now seeing her
view of webspace.
Hobo, meanwhile, has suddenly started painting people: to
everyone's astonishment, he's made a portrait of Shoshana. No
ape has ever made representational art before; a superior
intelligence has dawned in Hobo, perhaps related to his unique
hybrid nature or because of his interaction with the other
sign-language-using ape via webcam. Either way, it's a huge
breakthrough.
In Beijing, the police arrest Sinanthropus, but not until after
he has leaked word to the outside world about the massacre in
Shanxi.
Caitlin has a disastrous first date with a boy named Trevor
Nordmann, who, like her, is in grade ten. Walking home blind
and alone during an electrical storm, she suddenly sees the real
world for the first time or at least part of it: she sees
the flashes of lightning.
And so does the emerging entity! It sees whatever she sees
whether it's her view of the Web or now this brief glimpse
of the real world.
After the lightning storm passes, Caitlin finds that her
perception of webspace is different. Before, the background had
been featureless, but now she can see a vast grid shimmering
there, made up of infinitesimally small pixels that keep shifting
from black to white and back again. Amazed, Dr. Kuroda realizes
they might be cellular automata patterns of
mathematical complexity that can mimic living things but
as to why such things would exist in the background of the Web,
he has no idea.
Caitlin, Dr. Kuroda, and Anna Bloom theorize that the cellular
automata are somehow related to mutant lost packets bits
of Web data that have gone astray, and aren't being erased as
they should be. And although Kuroda thinks there's a great
scientific paper in this phenomenon, he also realizes that the
research might have marketable applications. That's something
Caitlin doesn't want to hear; it's her websight her
ability to see the Web's structure that revealed the
existence of the cellular automata, and she thinks information
should be free.
Kuroda and Caitlin's father, a cold and reserved physicist named
Malcolm Decter, do a mathematical analysis called a
Zipf plot on the cellular-automata data, to see if they
are just random noise or if they contain information and,
to their excitement, the latter turns out to the be the case.
Later, while Caitlin is at school, Kuroda realizes why the
hardware he gave her was able to see only the bright lightning
flashes but nothing else in the real world. He queues up a
software patch to install itself next time Caitlin switches her
eyePod into receive mode something she normally wouldn't
do at school. But Caitlin, bored by an experiment she can't see
in chemistry class, switches modes there so that she can amuse
herself by looking at the wondrous spectacle of webspace, and
to her delight and astonishment suddenly she can
see the real world. She's overwhelmed and amazed by the beauty
and complexity of it all.
And the nascent consciousness is seeing what Caitlin is now
seeing, too, and has the shocking realization that another realm
another reality exists. It begins to puzzle out
the nature of that reality, in which objects can move relative to
each other, and an invisible force pulls things downward, and
most incredible of all countless other animate
beings exist.
In hopes of arousing public interest that will save Hobo from
sterilization, Dr. Marcuse puts a video of the ape painting
Shoshana onto YouTube and, as Caitlin views this video,
which provides a comparison between the real Shoshana and the
portrait Hobo has made, the emerging entity, watching along,
learns how to understand and recognizes faces.
But there's one being in our reality that the entity assumes it
will never see: Caitlin herself (which the entity refers to as
"Prime"). Since the entity sees our world from Prime's
perspective, it reasons it will never see Prime's face. But
suddenly the entity does see Prime's face as
Caitlin examines her own reflection in a mirror. This gives the
entity an idea, and it tries to send Prime a large amount of
data, but, maddeningly, Caitlin seems unwilling to accept it.
Caitlin's father does another kind of mathematical analysis on
the cellular-automata data from the background of the Web. This
one's called a Shannon-entropy plot, and it indicates how
sophisticated the data is. He finds that the cellular automata
are exhibiting only second-level Shannon entropy, meaning
whatever information they contain isn't very complex.
Now that Caitlin can see, she's saddened to find that her father
won't look at her. She learns to her shock that he's not just
undemonstrative, he's actually autistic.
A press conference is held to announce Dr. Kuroda's success in
restoring Caitlin's sight. When she returns home, Caitlin gets a
static-electric shock that causes her vision to shut off; she's
afraid the static has damaged her eyePod. When she reboots the
device, it comes back to life, much to her relief but it
turns on in its default mode, in which it receives signals from
the Web, and, at last, the large amount of data the emerging
entity has been trying to send Caitlin bursts into her visual
consciousness. It takes her a while to recognize the flickering
image: herself, as seen in a mirror! She's often enough
reflected her view of webspace back at the Web, and now it seems
that something lurking on the Web is reflecting its view of her
back at Caitlin!
Having never seen letters before, Caitlin doesn't yet know how to
read printed text, and so she practices using a kid's literacy
website. Unbeknownst to her, the emerging entity is learning
along with her; indeed, the entity assumes the lessons are for
its benefit.
On her own, Caitlin runs a new Shannon-entropy plot on a fresh
set of cellular-automata data from the Web, and finds third-order
entropy, rather than the less-complex second-order score her
father had obtained. And, as if that isn't intriguing enough,
there's some new visual noise in what Caitlin sees when she
visualizes the Web. Dr. Kuroda examines the feed she's
receiving, and, to his great surprise, he discovers it contains
the text APPLEBALLCATDOGEGGFROG simple words that she'd
encountered when using the literacy website, all run together
being echoed back at her.
Caitlin runs another Shannon-entropy plot, and this time gets
fourth-order entropy. But why on Earth would the information
complexity carried by the cellular automata be ramping up?
Still, it's clear to her that there is something there,
and it's getting smarter by the hour. Annie Sullivan had brought
forth Helen Keller, lifting her from darkness by teaching her,
and Caitlin decides to do the same thing for this entity. She
may not be able to reach her autistic father, but perhaps she can
reach this strange other ... whatever it might be.
Dr. Kuroda has found a way to make image files from Caitlin's
websight, capturing her views of webspace, and she uses one of
these images to try to teach the entity about things in its
reality: websites, links, and the process of transferring
information. This leads the entity to something like the famous
water-pump moment when Helen Keller first grasped what words were
for.
Kuroda has to return to Japan, much to Caitlin's disappointment.
Before leaving Canada, he intends to shut off Caitlin's ability
to receive data from the Web which means she'll no longer
be able to interact with the entity; Kuroda is completely in the
dark about the entity's existence, and is stunned when Caitlin
blows up at him when he tells her what he's planning to do. But
he relents, letting her keep the two-way data connection with the
Web.
Dr. Marcuse is served with papers in a lawsuit: the Georgia Zoo
is taking legal action to repossess Hobo so that it can castrate
him. The primatologists realize they've been naïve in
thinking the world will welcome a superior intelligence that has
emerged accidentally.
And maybe Caitlin is being naïve, too. Without telling
anyone what she's doing, she draws the entity's attention to Cyc,
a huge online database that systemizes basic knowledge and common
sense about our reality ("birds can usually fly," "humans cannot
fly on their own," etc.). She then leads it to an online
dictionary, then to Wikipedia, then to the vast repository of
plain-text public-domain books at Project Gutenberg.
The entity absorbs all of it, learning rapidly; Caitlin is
stunned to find its Shannon-entropy score has hit 16.4
double the sophistication of human beings. And, she suspects,
the entity's growth is not done yet ...
The entity now wants to reach out to Caitlin just as much as
Caitlin wants to reach out to it. On her sixteenth birthday,
they at last make contact via instant messenger! The
entity now understands a great deal about Caitlin's world, and
about the structure of the World Wide Web, but it still doesn't
know what it itself is; it can find no reference online to a
consciousness existing on the Web. And so it asks Caitlin: "Who
am I?"
Without revealing the entity's existence, Caitlin contacts Anna
Bloom, the Internet cartographer, to get an image that might help
Caitlin show the complexity of the Web to the entity.
Anna has been thinking about what Caitlin's experience of seeing
the world for the first time must be like. Anna suspects it's
similar to what the whole human race went through in the late
1960s, when astronauts got far enough away from Earth for the
first time to see it as a single object. She shows such a
picture to Caitlin, and plays for her a recording of the
Apollo 8 crew's own reaction to first seeing that
wondrous sight. It moved them on Christmas Eve, 1968, to read
aloud passages from Genesis, beginning with "Let there be light"
and ending with "... and God saw that it was good." The
astronauts concluded by saying, "And from the crew of
Apollo 8, we close with good night, good luck, a
Merry Christmas, and God bless all of you all of you on
the good Earth."
Caitlin shares all this with the entity, making the point that
together humanity and the entity constitute a single small and
fragile world, floating against the vast, empty darkness. "We
are one," she says.
The entity takes a name for itself: Webmind. Caitlin asks
it, "Where do we go from here?"
And Webmind replies, calling its new partner by name for the
first time: "The only place we can go, Caitlin: into the future
together."
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