Everyone says the Culture novelsare the best example of an AI utopia, but even though it’s a cliché to mention the culture, it’s a cliché for a good reason. Don’t start with Consider Phlebas (the first one), but otherwise just dive in. My other recommendation is the Commonwealth Saga by Peter F Hamilton and the later Void Trilogy—it’s not on the same level of writing quality as the Culture, although still a great story, but it depicts an arguably superior world to that of the Culture—with more unequivocal support of life extension and transhumanism.
The Commonwealth has effective immortality, a few downsides of it are even noticeable (their culture and politics is a bit more stagnant than we might like), but there’s never any doubt at all that it’s worth it, and it’s barely commented on in the story. The latter-day Void Trilogy Commonwealth is probably the closest a work of published fiction has come to depicting a true eudaemonic utopia that lacks the problems of the culture.
Everyone says the Culture novels are the best example of an AI utopia, but even though it’s a cliché to mention the culture, it’s a cliché for a good reason. Don’t start with Consider Phlebas (the first one), but otherwise just dive in. My other recommendation is the Commonwealth Saga by Peter F Hamilton and the later Void Trilogy—it’s not on the same level of writing quality as the Culture, although still a great story, but it depicts an arguably superior world to that of the Culture—with more unequivocal support of life extension and transhumanism.
The Commonwealth has effective immortality, a few downsides of it are even noticeable (their culture and politics is a bit more stagnant than we might like), but there’s never any doubt at all that it’s worth it, and it’s barely commented on in the story. The latter-day Void Trilogy Commonwealth is probably the closest a work of published fiction has come to depicting a true eudaemonic utopia that lacks the problems of the culture.