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Greg Bear

Science fiction author Greg Bear was born in San Diego, California, on August 20, 1951. His work has covered themes of galactic conflict (Forge of God books), artificial universes (Eon series) and accelerated evolution (Blood Music, Darwin's Radio and Darwin's Children). He is the son-in-law of Poul Anderson.

Work

While the scale and detailed science of his work makes clear that he should be classified as a hard science fiction author, the plausibility of some of his science has been labelled questionable by some. For example, it is has been pointed out that it hard to imagine that the bacteria in Blood Music could process enough information to become self-aware. Others have noted that singly, the bacteria could merely have information processing ability and they could then develop consciousness when they grouped into colonies.

The Forge of God uses the Gaia theory freely in ways that might be considered questionable by some scientists. Neo-Darwinists such as Richard Dawkins would question the introduction of the Gaia hypothesis itself. More recent works such as the Darwin's Radio/Darwin's Children pair of novels which deal with the impact of a strange disease which appears to drive evolutionary transitions, stick closely to the known facts of molecular biology of viruses and evolution. While some fairly speculative ideas are entertained (it is after all, fiction) they are introduced in such a rigorous and disciplined way within the context of the cutting edge of those disciplines, that Darwin's Radio gained praise in the science journal Nature.

While most of Bear's work is science fiction, two of his early works, The Infinity Concerto and The Serpent Mage are clearly fantasies.

Bibliography

External links

Referenced By

1951 | 1951 in literature | 1985 in literature | 1987 in literature | 1990 in literature | 1992 in literature | 1993 in literature | 1994 in literature | 1998 in literature | 1999 in literature | 2000 in literature | 2002 in literature | 2003 book | 2003 in literature | 20 August | 20th August | Apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic science fiction | Apocalyptic science fiction | August 20 | August 20th | Big Dumb Object | Biographical Listing/BE | Blood Music | Clanking Replicator | Eon (novel) | Fermi's paradox | Fermi's question | Fermi paradox | Fictional planet | FoundationTrilogy | Foundation Series | Foundation Trilogy | Foundation and Chaos | Gregory Benford | Hackers (short stories) | Hard science fiction | Hari Seldon | Hugo Award for Best Novel | Hugo Award for Best Novellette | Hugo Award for Best Short Story | IsaacAsimov/TheFoundationSeries | Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series | Isaac Asimov/TheFoundationSeries | Isaac Asimov/The Foundation Series | Larry Niven | List of Hugo Award winning novels | List of authors by name: B | List of books by title: A | List of books by title: B | List of books by title: D | List of books by title: E | List of books by title: F | List of books by title: H | List of books by title: M | List of books by title: Q | List of books by title: S | List of books by title: V | List of fictional planets | List of people by name: BE | List of science fiction authors | Machine reproduction | Mars/Mars in fiction | Mars in fiction | Molecular nanotechnology | Nano-science | Nanoscience | Nanotech | Nanotechnology | Nebula Award | Nebula Award for Best Novel | Nebula Award for Best Novelette | Nebula Award for Best Novella | Nebula Award for Best Short Story | Nebula Awards | Nebulas | Planets in Science Fiction | Planets in fiction | Post-apocalypse Earth | Post-apocalyptic | Post-apocalyptic science fiction | SF Masterworks | Science fiction/Hard science fiction | Science fiction/authors | Science fiction author | Science fiction authors | Science fiction writers | Space travel argument | The Forge of God | The Foundation | The Foundation Series | Thistledown

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Greg Bear".

 

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