Editorial Reviews
Review
“Dialogues is important now because it describes (or described, rather, more than half a century ago—you can almost hear Lem’s slow hand-clapping from the Beyond) all the ways we do not comprehend the world we have made… Peter Butko’s translations of the Dialogues, and the revisionist essays Lem added to the 1971 second edition, are as witty and playful as Lem’s allusive Polish prose demands. His endnotes are practically a book in themselves (and an entertaining one too). Translated so well, Lem needs no explanation, no contextualisation, no excuse-making.”—The Times (UK)
Review
—Rachel Cordasco, SFinTranslation.com; author of Out of This World: Speculative Fiction in Translation from the Cold War to the New Millennium
“A supreme sci-fi writer takes us into the realm of cy-phi—philosophy of cyber-sciences. This book is more relevant today than when it was written, as computers are finally reaching the capacity to do things Lem dreams and warns about.”
—Slava Gerovitch, Department of Mathematics, MIT; author of From Newspeak to Cyberspeak: A History of Soviet Cybernetics
“Thanks to this belated translation, we now have access to Lem’s intensive engagement with cybernetics. Exploring these proto-singularities, and their discontents, in nimble neo-Platonic dialogues, this is an indispensable book for anyone interested in the history of information theory.”
—Dominic Pettman, University Professor of Media and New Humanities, The New School
“Stanisław Lem is Thomas Aquinas for Homo technologicus. He was perhaps the last thinker able to reflect upon the whole of science and human progress.”
—Jacek Dukaj, author of Ice and The Old Axolotl
Reviews
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