Table of Contents
- 1 How many books in the culture series by Iain Banks?
- 2 Where do the Culture ship names in this collection come from?
- 3 Why do the machine intelligences have names?
- 4 Who are the characters in the culture cycle?
- 5 What is the culture’s view on money?
- 6 What is the best class of battleship for the Imperium?
- 7 What happened to HP Lovecraft’s estate?
- 8 What was Lovecraft’s childhood like?
- 9 Was Lovecraft overworked?
How many books in the culture series by Iain Banks?
1987–2012 series of ten books by Iain Banks. The Culture series is a science fiction series written by Scottish author Iain M. Banks.
Where do the Culture ship names in this collection come from?
Most of the Culture ship names in this collection come from the titles of the chapters in the titular novella; the narrator explains that he has chosen ship names for these titles. Produced by a manufactory of the Yinang Orbitals of the Dahass-Khree, known for ships that are “a bit crazy.” Funny, It Worked Last Time… Boo!
Why do the machine intelligences have names?
The machine intelligences called Minds (and, as a consequence, the Culture starships that they inhabit) usually bear names that do a little more than just identify them. The Minds choose their own names, and thus they usually express something about a particular Mind’s attitude, character or aims in their personal life.
What can you do with Culture ships?
Mobile habitats and factory ships, largest and most capable Culture ship type. Build and host other ships, including smaller Systems Vehicles. May be home to billions of people.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vjsYz-Xv5lo
Did banks know what he was doing with the AI minds?
“In vesting all power in his individualistic, sometime eccentric, but always benign, AI Minds, Banks knew what he was doing; this is the only way a liberal anarchy could be achieved, by taking what is best in humans and placing it beyond corruption, which means out of human control.
Who are the characters in the culture cycle?
The novels of the Culture cycle, therefore, mostly deal with people at the fringes of the Culture: diplomats, spies, or mercenaries; those who interact with other civilisations, and who do the Culture’s dirty work in moving those societies closer to the Culture ideal, sometimes by force.
What is the culture’s view on money?
As a consequence, the Culture has no need of economic constructs such as money (as is apparent when it deals with civilizations in which money is still important). The Culture rejects all forms of economics based on anything other than voluntary activity.
What is the best class of battleship for the Imperium?
The Apocalypse -class Battleship has been best employed in the Imperial Navy when fighting from afar. The battleship’s Lance batteries can make short work of most vessels known to the Imperium, especially escorts, light cruisers and some types of cruiser.
What are the Abyss-class battleships?
The Abyss-class Battleships were a triumvirate of unique Imperial battleships of special configuration secretly constructed for the Word Bearers Legion by the Dark Mechanicum faction of the ancient Mechanicum in the days just before the outbreak of the Horus Heresy.
Why are there so many classes of warship?
To satisfy this constant need, a bewildering variety of classes of warship were developed to fulfil an equally bewildering variety of roles.
What happened to HP Lovecraft’s estate?
That all changed when Lovecraft was a teenager, writes the Smithsonian, when Whipple died from a stroke, and the inheritance paperwork got all screwed up. As detailed by Paul Roland’s The Curious Case of H.P. Lovecraft, the board of Whipple’s business reacted to the death by dissolving the entire firm.
What was Lovecraft’s childhood like?
Personal traumas aside, Lovecraft spent his early years with the benefit of a rather privileged upbringing, largely thanks to the wealth of his grandfather. That all changed when Lovecraft was a teenager, writes the Smithsonian, when Whipple died from a stroke, and the inheritance paperwork got all screwed up.
Was Lovecraft overworked?
Nonetheless, as Lovecraft grew older, he stubbornly held fast to the “overwork” theory, perhaps preferring it to the sad truth. Lovecraft was, according to the H. P. Lovecraft Archive, a bright and intelligent kid with a passion for knowledge.