Category: Books
Books offer depth, reflection, and symbolic resonance—documenting how artificial intelligence and robotics are imagined, critiqued, and contextualized across genres and generations. This section gathers written works from fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and theory, tracing how language becomes a vessel for technological inquiry and emotional meaning.
Whether exploring sentient machines, algorithmic ethics, or the poetics of synthetic life, each entry reveals how authors shape the narrative infrastructure of intelligent systems.
A book isn’t just a text—it’s a ritual of interpretation, a mirror of imagination, and a signal of what we teach and remember.
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Neuromancer by William Gibson – A Cyberpunk Classic in Context
Historical and Cultural Context In 1984, William Gibson’s debut novel Neuromancer burst onto the science fiction scene, helping launch a bold new subgenre that came to be known as cyberpunk. The early 1980s provided fertile ground for this movement – a time of Cold War anxieties, rising conservatism, and rapid technological change. Personal computing was…