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Cixin Liu's The Three-Body Problem

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In a world overflowing with uncertainty, people search for meaning in life through different outlets and activities. Playing on sports teams, working for corporations, and joining sororities and fraternities grant purpose to people’s existence. Cixin Liu, in his Hugo award-winning novel, The Three-Body Problem, addresses the universal habit of belonging to a larger group; these groups can benefit characters, as it leads to an expanded wealth of knowledge— a group of minds is smarter than one mind— but can also lead people astray when they prioritize the group’s needs in place of their own. The book follows numerous characters through countless time jumps, dating from China’s Cultural Revolution to modern-day Earth and space, but Liu dedicates most of the story to Wang Miao, a nanomaterials …show more content…

Wang remains level-headed and alert in all scenes but other characters subscribe to ideals too strongly and pay the price, all stemming from the horrors of the Cultural Revolution. Liu highlights the dangers of subscribing and holding on to an idea too tightly, resulting in a lapse of judgment and definitive consequences. The novel opens in the midst of the Cultural Revolution, a battle between China’s intellectual population and the rest of the Communist country. Ye Zhetai, a physics professor at Tsinghua University, finds himself caught in the crosshairs of the Revolution when he remains steadfast in his teaching methods. His wife, Shao Lin, who, “could feel the political winds shifting in academia and prepared [herself]” and “explained to [her] students that all scientific accomplishments resulted from the wisdom of the working masses, and those capitalist academic authorities only stole these fruits and put their names

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