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Interplanetary conflict, some disease destroys the ability to understand or appreciate music


Heroic Federation-like organization gains the ability to predict entropy hijinks ensueTime traveller destroys the universe by going fifteen minutes backTrying to find story, with an alien race who was digging tunnels to change planet's rotation and eventually orbitTrying to find the name of a story about humanity having the power to collapse quantum states in their favourLooking for a book where some girls and boys have the ability to manipulate life and time like the FatesSci-Fi book where spider-like alien lives on the hull of a ship and configures his web to forecast space weather or the future?Looking for a late 1950s to early 1960s movie or TV show with some similarities to “The Zanti Misfits”2000s(?) trans/post-humanist coming-of-age story with a wooden spaceship, augmented reality, and a “God Drive”Book where people catch the Green Sick, an alien disease, they need evacuating off world to be curedNovel: little girl holding a green stone that gave her the ability to talk to animals













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There is some kind of interplanetary conflict going on between different human factions (aliens may or may not be involved). As a relatively minor plot point a group of or all humans have lost the ability to appreciate or comprehend music through a virus or other disease. I believe it changed their DNA so the (loss) trait was inherited.










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    7















    There is some kind of interplanetary conflict going on between different human factions (aliens may or may not be involved). As a relatively minor plot point a group of or all humans have lost the ability to appreciate or comprehend music through a virus or other disease. I believe it changed their DNA so the (loss) trait was inherited.










    share|improve this question



























      7












      7








      7


      1






      There is some kind of interplanetary conflict going on between different human factions (aliens may or may not be involved). As a relatively minor plot point a group of or all humans have lost the ability to appreciate or comprehend music through a virus or other disease. I believe it changed their DNA so the (loss) trait was inherited.










      share|improve this question
















      There is some kind of interplanetary conflict going on between different human factions (aliens may or may not be involved). As a relatively minor plot point a group of or all humans have lost the ability to appreciate or comprehend music through a virus or other disease. I believe it changed their DNA so the (loss) trait was inherited.







      story-identification novel






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      share|improve this question













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      share|improve this question








      edited 4 hours ago









      Virusbomb

      2,3211021




      2,3211021










      asked 4 hours ago









      JonathanJonathan

      564




      564






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          7














          That's Alastair Reynolds "Century Rain" (my personal favourite among Reynolds' novels). The war is between two human factions - "Threshers" (derived from "threshold", since they don't allow technology beyond a certain level of complexity) and "Slashers", who embrace nanotechnology. Earth was an early casualty in their conflict.



          No aliens per se, but Alien artifacts (artifical wormholes, copies of planet Earth).



          Haven't the book with me, but e.g. this review specifically mentions the "amusica virus" (strange review by the way, since music actually has a big role in the novel). Also this one.



          Made it even into TV tropes (there goes the rest of your day):




          Dreadful Musician: Averted in Century Rain: in an early scene the
          protagonist is walking into a superior's office while he plays a
          violin, with her Internal Monologue noting how grating and painful the
          music is. It is then revealed that she, along with a large portion of
          the rest of the human race, were infected with a designer-disease
          called 'amusica', which prevented people from enjoying music, to ruin
          their side's morale. After all, someone who can't appreciate music
          can't get patriotic fervor from their anthems, now can they?







          share|improve this answer

























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            1 Answer
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            active

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            7














            That's Alastair Reynolds "Century Rain" (my personal favourite among Reynolds' novels). The war is between two human factions - "Threshers" (derived from "threshold", since they don't allow technology beyond a certain level of complexity) and "Slashers", who embrace nanotechnology. Earth was an early casualty in their conflict.



            No aliens per se, but Alien artifacts (artifical wormholes, copies of planet Earth).



            Haven't the book with me, but e.g. this review specifically mentions the "amusica virus" (strange review by the way, since music actually has a big role in the novel). Also this one.



            Made it even into TV tropes (there goes the rest of your day):




            Dreadful Musician: Averted in Century Rain: in an early scene the
            protagonist is walking into a superior's office while he plays a
            violin, with her Internal Monologue noting how grating and painful the
            music is. It is then revealed that she, along with a large portion of
            the rest of the human race, were infected with a designer-disease
            called 'amusica', which prevented people from enjoying music, to ruin
            their side's morale. After all, someone who can't appreciate music
            can't get patriotic fervor from their anthems, now can they?







            share|improve this answer






























              7














              That's Alastair Reynolds "Century Rain" (my personal favourite among Reynolds' novels). The war is between two human factions - "Threshers" (derived from "threshold", since they don't allow technology beyond a certain level of complexity) and "Slashers", who embrace nanotechnology. Earth was an early casualty in their conflict.



              No aliens per se, but Alien artifacts (artifical wormholes, copies of planet Earth).



              Haven't the book with me, but e.g. this review specifically mentions the "amusica virus" (strange review by the way, since music actually has a big role in the novel). Also this one.



              Made it even into TV tropes (there goes the rest of your day):




              Dreadful Musician: Averted in Century Rain: in an early scene the
              protagonist is walking into a superior's office while he plays a
              violin, with her Internal Monologue noting how grating and painful the
              music is. It is then revealed that she, along with a large portion of
              the rest of the human race, were infected with a designer-disease
              called 'amusica', which prevented people from enjoying music, to ruin
              their side's morale. After all, someone who can't appreciate music
              can't get patriotic fervor from their anthems, now can they?







              share|improve this answer




























                7












                7








                7







                That's Alastair Reynolds "Century Rain" (my personal favourite among Reynolds' novels). The war is between two human factions - "Threshers" (derived from "threshold", since they don't allow technology beyond a certain level of complexity) and "Slashers", who embrace nanotechnology. Earth was an early casualty in their conflict.



                No aliens per se, but Alien artifacts (artifical wormholes, copies of planet Earth).



                Haven't the book with me, but e.g. this review specifically mentions the "amusica virus" (strange review by the way, since music actually has a big role in the novel). Also this one.



                Made it even into TV tropes (there goes the rest of your day):




                Dreadful Musician: Averted in Century Rain: in an early scene the
                protagonist is walking into a superior's office while he plays a
                violin, with her Internal Monologue noting how grating and painful the
                music is. It is then revealed that she, along with a large portion of
                the rest of the human race, were infected with a designer-disease
                called 'amusica', which prevented people from enjoying music, to ruin
                their side's morale. After all, someone who can't appreciate music
                can't get patriotic fervor from their anthems, now can they?







                share|improve this answer















                That's Alastair Reynolds "Century Rain" (my personal favourite among Reynolds' novels). The war is between two human factions - "Threshers" (derived from "threshold", since they don't allow technology beyond a certain level of complexity) and "Slashers", who embrace nanotechnology. Earth was an early casualty in their conflict.



                No aliens per se, but Alien artifacts (artifical wormholes, copies of planet Earth).



                Haven't the book with me, but e.g. this review specifically mentions the "amusica virus" (strange review by the way, since music actually has a big role in the novel). Also this one.



                Made it even into TV tropes (there goes the rest of your day):




                Dreadful Musician: Averted in Century Rain: in an early scene the
                protagonist is walking into a superior's office while he plays a
                violin, with her Internal Monologue noting how grating and painful the
                music is. It is then revealed that she, along with a large portion of
                the rest of the human race, were infected with a designer-disease
                called 'amusica', which prevented people from enjoying music, to ruin
                their side's morale. After all, someone who can't appreciate music
                can't get patriotic fervor from their anthems, now can they?








                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited 3 hours ago

























                answered 3 hours ago









                Eike PierstorffEike Pierstorff

                8,66723538




                8,66723538






























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