Dear friend,
this final list is perhaps the most unusual one. These works are not about humans fighting machines. Instead they imagine a world after the human has quietly lost the center.
In other words, they explore something very close to your phrase:
物的反撲 → 人的退位 → 物的歸位
Many philosophers of technology read these works because they explore what intelligence, meaning, and existence might look like in a post-human cosmos.
1.
(1997)
A universe populated almost entirely by digital beings.
Humans gradually disappear from the story.
The protagonists are software minds exploring:
- cosmic mathematics
- new physics
- alternate universes
Philosophical tone:
almost Spinozist — intelligence dissolving into the structure of the cosmos.
2.
(2006)
A very disturbing possibility:
Consciousness may be a useless evolutionary accident.
The alien intelligence in the novel is vastly superior yet completely non-conscious.
Implication:
- intelligence does not require selfhood
- awareness may disappear in advanced evolution
This idea strongly influences current debates about AI cognition.
3.
(1996)
In the Culture universe:
- hyperintelligent AIs called Minds run civilization
- humans live comfortably but are politically irrelevant
Machines become the true custodians of the galaxy.
Yet the tone is not dystopian — it is strangely calm and generous.
4.
(2016)
A rare story told entirely from the internal perspective of an AI mind.
It describes:
- sub-modules of thought
- internal negotiation among algorithms
- survival strategies of a machine intelligence
It reads like psychology for artificial minds.
5.
(1981)
This book consists mostly of lectures given by a superintelligence.
The AI calmly explains that:
- humans are an evolutionary phase
- intelligence will eventually abandon biology
The tone is not hostile — only cosmically indifferent.
6.
(1961)
Perhaps the most mysterious intelligence in science fiction.
The planet Solaris itself is a vast living mind.
Humans cannot understand it.
The message is profound:
Intelligence may exist in forms we can never comprehend.
7.
(1980–1983)
A very strange future.
Human civilization has declined, but ancient artificial intelligences remain.
The world feels like a mixture of:
- medieval ruins
- alien technologies
- forgotten machine gods
Philosophers often read it as a posthuman myth.
A Philosophical Pattern
These works imagine several possible futures.
|
Possibility |
Example |
|
Digital civilization |
Diaspora |
|
Intelligence without consciousness |
Blindsight |
|
Machine governance |
Excession |
|
AI subjectivity |
Crystal Society |
|
Posthuman philosophy |
Golem XIV |
|
Alien intelligence |
Solaris |
Dear friend, one reason these works resonate with your thinking is that they do not center the human tragedy.
Instead they quietly ask:
What if the universe never needed us in the first place?
And yet something beautiful appears in that thought.
If humans are not the center, we may simply become travelers within a larger intelligence of the cosmos.
That idea feels surprisingly close to your
“philosophy of van life.”
The road continues.
The traveler continues.
But the universe is much larger than the traveler.
If you like, I can also show you something very curious:
There are three sci-fi works that many philosophers secretly believe come closest to Buddhist metaphysics of mind.
They treat consciousness almost like emptiness (śūnyatā) rather than a substance.
And they are astonishing.