John C. Wright - Golden Age 1 - The Golden Age

VIP免费
2024-12-23 0 0 563.78KB 183 页 5.9玖币
侵权投诉
THE GOLDEN AGE
by JOHN C. WRIGHT (2002)
[VERSION 1.2 (February 27 2006). If you find and correct errors in the text, please update the version
number by 0.1 and redistribute.]
DRAMATIS PERSONAE
Grouped by nervous system formation (neuroform)
Biochemical Self-Aware Entities
Base neuroform
PHAETHON PRIME of RHADAMANTH, Silver-Gray Manorial School.
HELION RELIC of RHADAMANTH, Phaethon's sire, founder of the Silver-Gray Manorial School,
and a Peer.
DAPHNE TERCIUS SEMI-RHADAMANTH, Phaethon's wife.
GANNIS HUNDRED-MIND GANNIS, Synergistic-Synnoint School, a Peer.
ATKINS VINGT-ET-UN GENERAL-ISSUE, a soldier.
Nonstandard neuroforms
VAFNIR of MERCURY EQUILATERAL STATION, a Peer.
XENOPHON of FARAWAY, Tritonic Neuroform Composure School, called the Neptunians.
XINGIS of NEREID, also called DIOMEDES, Silver-Gray School.
Alternate Organization neuroform, commonly called Warlocks
AO AOEN, the Master-Dreamer, a Peer.
NEO-ORPHEUS the Apostate, protonothary and chair of the College of Hortators.
ORPHEUS MYRIAD AVERNUS, founder of the Second Immortality, a Peer.
Cortial-Thalamically Integrated neuroform, commonly called Invariants
KES SENNEC the Logician, a Peer.
Cerebelline neuroform
WHEEL-OF-LIFE, an Ecological Mathematician, a Peer.
GREEN-MOTHER, the artiste who organizes the ecological performance at Destiny Lake.
Mass-Mind Compositions
The ELEEMOSYNARY COMPOSITION, a Peer.
The HARMONIOUS COMPOSITION, of the College of Hortators.
The BELLIPOTENT COMPOSITION (disbanded).
Electrophotonic Self-Aware Entities
Sophotechs
RHADAMANTHUS, a manor-house of the Silver-Gray School, million-cycle capacity.
EVENINGSTAR, a manor-house of the Red school, million-cycle capacity.
NEBUCHADNEZZAR, advisor to the College of Hortators, ten-million-cycle capacity.
HARRIER, consulting detective, one-hundred-thousand-cycle capacity.
MONOMARCHOS, a barrister, one-hundred-thousand-cycle capacity.
AURELIAN, host of the Celebration, fifty-thousand-million-cycle loose capacity.
The ENNEAD consists of nine Sophotech groups, each of over a billion-cycle capacity, including
Warmind, Westmind, Orient, Austral, Boreal, Northwest, Southwest, and others.
EARTHMIND, the unified consciousness in which all terrestrial machines, and machines in
Near-Earth-Orbit, from time to time participate: trillion-cycle capacity.
-=*=-
PROLOGUE
CELEBRATIONS OF THE IMMORTALS
It was a time of masquerade. It was the eve of the High Transcendence, an event so solemn and
significant that it could be held but once each thousand years, and folk of every name and iteration,
phenotype, composition, consciousness and neuroform, from every school and era, had come to
celebrate its coming, to welcome the transfiguration, and to prepare.
Splendor, feast, and ceremony filled the many months before the great event itself. Energy shapes
living in the north polar magnetosphere of the sun, and Cold Dukes from the Kuiper belts beyond
Neptune, had gathered to Old Earth, or sent their representations through the mentality; and celebrants
had come from every world and moon in the solar system, from every station, sail, habitat and
crystal-magnetic latticework.
No human or posthuman race of the Golden Oecumene was absent from these festivities. Fictional as
well as actual personalities were invited. Composition-assisted reconstructions of dead or deleted
paladins and sages, magnates and philosophers, walked by night the boulevards of the Aurelian
palace-city, arm-in-arm with extrapolated demigoddesses from imagined superhuman futures, or
languid-eyed lamia from morbid unrealized alternatives, and strolled or danced among the monuments
and energy sculptures, fountains, dream fixtures, and phantasms, all beneath a silver, city-covered moon,
larger than the moon past ages knew.
And here and there, shining like stars on the active channels of the mentality, were recidivists who had
returned from high transhuman states of mind, bringing back with them thought-shapes or mathematical
constructions inexpressible in human words, haunted by memories of what the last Transcendence had
accomplished, feverish with dreams of what the next might hold.
It was a time of cheer.
And yet, even in such golden days, there were those who would not be satisfied.
-=*=-
THE OLD MAN
On the hundred-and-first night of the Millennial Celebration, Phaethon walked away from the lights
and music, movement and gaiety of the golden palace-city, and out into the solitude of the groves and
gardens beyond. In this time of joy, he was not at ease himself; and he did not know why.
His full name was Phaethon Prime Rhadamanth Humodified (augment) Uncomposed,
Indepconciousness, Base Neuroformed, Silver-Gray Manorial Schola, Era 7043 (the "Reawakening").
This particular evening, the west wing of the Aurelian Palace-city had been set aside for a
Presentation of Visions by the elite of Rhadamanthus Mansion. Phaethon had been extended an invitation
to sit on the panel of dream-judges, and, eager to experience the future histories involved, had happily
accepted. Phaethon had been imagining the evening, perhaps, would be in miniature, for Rhadamanthus
House, what the High Transcendence in December would be for all mankind.
But he was disappointed. The review of one drab and uninspired extrapolation after another had
drained his patience.
Here was a future where all men were recorded as brain-information in a diamond logic crystal
occupying the core of the earth; there was one where all humanity existed in the threads of a plantlike
array of sails and panels forming a Dyson Sphere around the sun; a third promised, larger than worlds,
housings for trillions of minds and superminds, existing in the absolute cold of trans-Neptunian space --
cold was required for any truly precise subatomic engineering -- but with rails or elevators of unthinkably
dense material running across hundreds of AU, across the whole width of the solar system, and down
into the mantle of the sun, both to mine the hydrogen ash for building matter, and to tap the vast energy of
Sol, should ever matter or energy in any amount be needed by the immobile deep-space mainframes
housing the minds of mankind.
Any one of them should have been a breathtaking vision. The engineering was worked out in loving
detail. Phaethon could not name what it was he wanted, but he knew he wanted none of these futures
being offered him.
Daphne, his wife, who was only a collateral member of the House, had not been invited; and, Helion,
his sire, was present only as a partial-version, the primary having been called away to a conclave of the
Peers.
And so it was that in the center of a loud, happy throng of brightly costumed telepresences,
mannequins, and real-folk, and with a hundred high windows in the Presence Hall busy and bright with
monotonous futures, and with a thousand channels clamoring with messages, requests, and invitations for
him, Phaethon realized that he was entirely alone.
Fortunately, it was masquerade, and he was able to assign his face and his role to a backup copy of
himself. He donned the disguise of a Harlequin clown, with lace at his throat and mask on his face, and
then slipped out of a side entrance before any of Helion's lieutenants or squires-of-honor thought to stop
him.
Without a word or signal to anyone, Phaethon departed, and he walked across silent lawns and
gardens by moonlight, accompanied only by his thoughts.
-=*=-
He wandered far, to a place he had not seen before. Beyond the gardens, in an isolated dell, he
entered a grove of silver-crowned trees. He paced slowly through the grove, hands clasped behind his
back, sniffing the air and gazing up at the stars between the leaves above. In the gloom, the dark and
fine-grained bark was like black silk, and the leaves had mirror tissues, so that when the night breeze
blew, the reflections of moonlight overhead rippled like silver lake water.
It took him a moment to notice what was odd about the scene. The flowers were open, even though it
was night, and their faces were turned toward one bright planet above the horizon.
Puzzled, Phaethon paused and pointed two fingers at the nearest trunk, making the identification
gesture. Evidently the protocols of the masquerade extended to the trees as well, and no explanation of
the trees, no background was forthcoming.
"We live in a golden age, the age of Saturn," said a voice from behind him. "Small wonder that our
humor should be saturnine as well."
One who appeared as a wrinkle-faced man, wearing a robe as white as his hair and beard, stood not
far away, leaning on a walking stick. During masquerade, Phaethon had no recognition file available in
mind, and thus could not tell what dream-level, composition, or neuroform this old man was. Phaethon
was not sure how to act. There were things one could say or do to a computer fiction that a real person,
a telepresence, or even a partial, would find shockingly rude.
He decided on a polite reply, just in case. "Good evening to you, sir. Then there is a hidden meaning
to this display?" His gesture encompassed the grove.
"Aha! You are not a child of this present age, then, since you seek to look below the surface beauty
of things."
Phaethon was not certain how to take this comment. It was either a slight against the society in which
he lived, or else against himself. "You suspect me to be a simulacrum? I assure you, I am real."
"So simulacra must seem to themselves, I suppose, should anyone ask them," said the white-bearded
man with a wide-armed shrug.
Then he seated himself on a mossy rock with a grunt. "But let us leave the question of your identity --
this is a masquerade, after all, and not the right time to inquire, eh? -- and study instead the instruction of
the trees here. I do not know if you detect the energy web grown throughout the bark layers; but a
routine calculates the amount of light which would shine, and the angle of its fall, were the planet Saturn to
ignite like some third sun. Then, true to these calculations, the energy web triggers photosynthesis in the
leaves and flowers, and, naturally, favors the side and angles from which the light would come, you see?"
"Thus they bloom at night," Phaethon said softly, impressed by the intricacy of the work.
"Day or night," the white-bearded man said, "provided only that Saturn is above the horizon."
Phaethon thought it ironic that the white-haired man had picked Saturn as the position for his fictitious
new sun. Phaethon knew Saturn would never be improved, the huge atmosphere never be mined for
volatiles. He himself had twice headed projects to reengineer Saturn and render that barren wasteland
more useful to human needs, or to clear out the cluttered navigational hazards for which near-Saturn
space was notorious. In both cases public outcry had halted his efforts and driven away his financial
support. Too many people were in love with the majestic (but utterly useless) ring-system.
The white-haired man was still speaking: "Yes, they follow the rise and fall of Saturn. And -- listen!
here is the curious part -- over the generations, the flowers have evolved complex reactions so that their
heads can turn to follow that wandering planet through cycle and epicycle, opposition, triune and
conjunction. Thus they thrive. They are not one whit disaccommodated by the fact the sun they follow
with such effort is a false one."
Phaethon looked back and forth across the grove. It was extensive. The cool night breeze tingled with
the scents of eerie mirrored blossoms.
Perhaps because the man looked so odd, white bearded, wrinkled, and leaning on a stick, just the
way a character from an old novel or reproduction might look, Phaethon spoke without reflection. "Well,
the artist here did not use flint-napped knives for his gene-splicing, and he didn't run his calculations in
Roman numerals on an abacus, eh? Rather a lot of effort for a pointless jest."
"Pointless?" The white-haired man scowled.
Phaethon realized his blunder. Perhaps the man was real after all. Probably he was the very artist who
had made this place. "Ah... Pardon me! 'Pointless,' I admit, may be too strong a word for it!"
"Oh? And what is the right word, then, eh?" asked the man testily.
"Well, ah... But this grove is meant to criticize the artificiality of our society, is it not?"
"Criticize?! It is meant to draw blood! It is Art! Art!"
Phaethon made an easy gesture. "No doubt the point here is too subtle for me to grasp. I fear I do not
understand what it means to criticize civilization for being artificial. Civilization, by definition, must be
artificial, since it is manmade. Isn't 'civilization' the very name we give to the sum total of manmade
things?"
"You are being obtuse, sir!" shouted the odd man, drumming his cane sharply into the moss underfoot.
"The point is! The point is that our civilization should be simpler."
Phaethon realized then that this man must be a member of one of those primitivist schools, whom
everyone seemed to revere but no one wanted to follow. They refused to have any brain modifications
whatsoever, even memory aids or emotion-balancing programs. They refused to use telephones,
televection, or motor transport.
And some, it was said, programmed the nanomachines floating in their cell nuclei to produce, as years
passed, the wrinkled skin, hair defects, osteoarthritis, and general physical decay that figured so
prominently in ancient literature, poems, and interactives. Phaethon wondered in horror what could
prompt a man to indulge in such slow and deliberate self-mutilation.
The man was speaking: "You are blind to what is plain before your eyes! Behold the mirrored layer of
tissue growing over all these leaves. It is to block the true sun from the knowledge of these plants.
Tracking a sun, which merely rises and sets, is easier than anticipating retrograde motion, I assure you.
Complex habits, painfully learned through generations, would be instantly thrown aside in one blast of
true sunlight. And therefore these little flowers have a mechanism to keep the truth at bay. Strange that
I've made the blocking tissue look mirrored; you can see your own face in it... if you look."
This comment verged on insult. Phaethon replied hotly: "Or perhaps the tissue merely protects them
from irritants, good sir!"
"Hah! So the puppy has teeth after all, eh? Have I irked you, then? This is Art also!"
"If Art is an irritant, like grit, good sir, then spend your genius praising the society cosmopolitan
enough to tolerate it! How do you think simple societies maintain their simplicity? By intolerance. Men
hunt; women gather; virgins guard the sacred flame. Anyone who steps outside their stereotypic social
roles is crushed."
"Well, well, young manor-born -- you are a manorial, are you not? Your words sound like someone
taught by machines -- what you don't know, young manor-born, is that cosmopolitan societies are
sometimes just as ruthless about crushing those who don't conform. Look at how unhappy they made
that reckless boy, what's-his-name, that Phaethon. There are worse things in store for him, I tell you!"
"I beg your pardon?" Strange. The sensation was not unlike stepping for a nonexistent stair, or having
apparently solid ground give way underfoot. Phaethon wondered if he had somehow wandered into a
simulation or a pseudomnesia-play without noticing it. "But... I am Phaethon. I am he. What in the world
do you mean?" And he took off the mask he wore.
"No, no. I mean the real Phaethon. Though you are quite bold to show up at a masquerade like this,
dressed in his face. Bold. Or tasteless!"
"But I am he!" A bewildered note began to creep into his voice.
"So you are Phaethon, eh? No, no, I think not. He is not welcome at parties."
Not welcome? Him? Rhadamanthus House was the oldest mansion of the Silver-Gray, and the
Silver-Gray was, in turn, the third oldest scholum in the entire manorial movement. Rhadamanthus
boasted over 7,600 members just of the elite communion, and not to mention tens of thousands of
collaterals, partials and secondaries. Not welcome? Phaethon's sire and gene-template was Helion,
founder of the Silver-Gray and archon of Rhadamanthus. Phaethon was welcome everywhere!
The strange old man was still speaking: "You could not be him: Phaethon wears grim and brooding
black and proud gold, not frills like those."
(For a moment, oddly enough, Phaethon could not quite recall how he usually dressed. But surely he
had no reason to dress in grim colors. Had he? He was not a grim man. Was he?)
He tried to speak calmly: "What do you say I have done to make me unwelcome at celebrations,
sir?"
"What has he done? Hah!" The white-haired man leaned back as if to avoid an unpleasant smell.
"Your joke is not appreciated, sir. As you may have guessed, I am a Antiamaranthine Purist, and I do not
carry a computer in my ear telling me every nuance of your manor-born protocols, or which fork to use,
or when to hold my tongue. Maybe I speak out of turn to say that the real Phaethon would be ashamed
to show his face at a festival like this! Ashamed! This is a celebration of those who love this civilization,
or who, like me, are urged to try to improve it by constructive criticism. But you!"
"Ashamed?... I have done nothing!"
"No, no more! Do not speak again! Perhaps I should get a brain filter like you machine-pets, so I
could merely blot out stains like you from my sight and memory. That would be ironic, wouldn't it? Me,
shrouded in a little silvery tissue of my own. But irony is perhaps more fit to an age of iron than to an age
of gold."
"Sir, I really must insist you tell me what--"
"What?!! Still here, you interloper! If you want to look like Phaethon, maybe I should treat you like
him, and have you thrown out of my grove on your ear!"
"Tell me the truth!" Phaethon stepped toward the man.
"Fortunately, this grove, and even the surrounding dream-space, are my own, not part of the party
grounds proper, and so I can throw you out, can't I?"
He cackled, and waved his walking stick.
The man, and the grove, disappeared. Phaethon found himself standing on green hilltop in the sunlight,
overlooking the palaces and gardens of the celebration shining in the distance. An overture of music came
faintly from the distant towers.
This was a scene from the first day of the celebration, one of the entrance scenarios. The old man had
deleted his grove scene from Phaethon's sensorium, throwing him back into his default setting. An
unthinkable rudeness! But, perhaps, allowed under the relaxed protocols and standards of the festival
time.
A moment of cold anger ran through Phaethon. He was surprised at the vehemence of his own
emotion. He was not normally an angry man -- was he?
Perhaps it would be wise to let the matter drop. There were entertainments and delights enough to
engage his attention at the Celebrations without pursuing this.
But... unlike everything he had seen, this was real. Phaethon's curiosity was piqued, and perhaps his
pride was stung. He would discover the answers.
He raised his fingers to his eyes and made the restart gesture. He was back in the scene, at night, in
the silvery grove, but alone. The man was either gone or he was hiding behind Phaethon's sense-filter.
With another gesture, Phaethon lowered his sense-filter and opened his brain to all the sensations in
the area, so he could look upon "reality" without any interpretation-buffer.
The shock of the noise and music, the screams of the Advertisements, startled him.
Panels and banners of lightweight film hung or floated grandly in the air. Each one flashed with colors
brighter and more gaudy than its neighbor; every image was twice as dizzying, alluring, and hypnotic as
the one before. Some of the Advertisements had projectors capable of directing stimulation into any brain
equipped to receive it.
When they noticed Phaethon staring (perhaps they had registers to note his eye movements and pupil
dilation -- such information was, after all, in the public domain) they folded and swooped, clamoring,
pressing around him, squawking, urging him to try, just once, free trial offer, their profferred stimulants
and additions, false memories, compositions, and thought schemes. They swarmed like angry sea gulls or
hungry children from some historical drama.
The music was, if anything, worse. A group from the Red Manorial School on one hillside in the
distance were having a combination scream-feast, Bacchanalia, and composition-symphony analogue.
Emancipated partials of the Psycho-asymmetric Insulae-Composition were on the other hillside, having a
noise duel. Their experimental 36- and 108-tone scale music, subsonic and hypersonic, trembled in
Phaethon's teeth. They made no effort to muffle the sound for the sake of those who did not share their
extensive ear/auditory lobe modifications, their peculiar subjective time-scale alterations, or their even
more peculiar aesthetic theories. Why should they? Every civilized person was assumed to have access
to some sort of sense-filter to allow them to block or to tolerate the noise.
And there was no sign of the white-haired man. Perhaps he had been a projection after all, or some
fiction, part of the art statement of the grove?
The flash and glamour of the transparent Advertisements did not block his view. The trees were
widely spaced, nor was there brush. And, unless the man had hidden behind the walking iceberg thing
looming above the grape trellises nearby, there was simply no place to hide.
Phaethon threw his hands before his face and gestured for his sense-filter to resume.
Peace and silence crashed into place around him. It was not, perhaps, the perfect truth he saw. But
the groves were quiet now, and starlight and moonlight slanted through the strange silver-mirrored leaves,
and falling blossoms. A routine calculated how the scene would look (and sound and feel and smell) were
the disturbing objects not present. The representation was close to real, "Surface Dreaming" as it was
called. The machine intelligences creating the illusion, able to think a million times faster than a man, or a
billion, could cleverly and symmetrically account for all inconsistencies and cover up any unwanted
errors.
His ears still rang with echoes; his eyes were still dazzled by floating half shapes, colors reversed. He
could have waited for his ears to stop ringing naturally, or blinked his eyes clear. But he was impatient;
the man he sought was no doubt getting away. He merely signaled for his eyes to reset to perfect night
adaptation, for his ears to restore.
Phaethon started to jog toward the grape trellises where...
The iceberg thing was gone. Phaethon saw nothing.
Iceberg? Phaethon's augmented memory could re-create an exact image of what he had-seen. It had
loomed, gigantic, over the area, moving on myriad legs of semiliquid, which solidified, elephantine, then
liquefied again as the creature drifted forward. Likewise, it had had a dozen arms or tentacles of ice
flowing and freezing around objects in the area, careful not to disturb the trees, but holding objects (eyes?
remote sensors?) near the garden plants, as if to study them from every angle.
It was, of course, a member of the Tritonic Neuroform Composition School, the so-called
Neptunians. The technology of their nerve-cell surface allowed them thought-speeds approaching that of
some of the slower Sophotechs; but the crystals of the cell surface exhibited their peculiar
electrosuperconductive and micropolymorphetic characteristics only under the near-absolute-zero
temperatures and near-metallic-hydrogen-forming pressures of the Neptunian atmosphere. The icy body
Phaethon had seen was armor -- living, shape-changing armor, but armor nonetheless, and a triumph of
molecular and submolecular technology. That armor allowed the Neptunian brain substances inside to
withstand the unbearable heat and (relative to Neptune) near-vacuum conditions of the earthly
atmosphere.
That he had programmed his sense-filter to block images of Advertisements or raucous music,
Phaethon could understand. But he did not remember (and his memory was photographically perfect)
ordering the filter to block views of Neptunians. Merely that one of that strange, remote school, the most
distant members of the Golden Oecumene, should come physically to Earth was cause for wonder and
comment.
Why in the world would Phaethon have ordered himself not to see, or to avoid remembering seeing,
such a being? It was true that Neptunians were thought of as reckless, innovative, untrustworthy, and
yet...
Phaethon took a moment to examine his sense-filter's censor. Only three of the command lines struck
him as odd. Very odd. One was meant to prevent him seeing the Cerebelline Green-Mother's
ecoperformance being held on Channels 12-20 at Destiny Lake. The second was to edit out sights and
references to the visiting Neptunian legates. A third was meant to distract him from studying astronomical
reports or information concerning a recent disaster in Mercurial space, brought on by solar prominences
and irregularities of unusual violence.
Why? What was the connection?
And why had he done this to himself? And then ordered himself to forget that he had done it?
Phaethon adjusted his sense-filter to allow himself to see the Neptunian (without hearing the music or
seeing those dreadful Advertisements) and was surprised to behold the gigantic creature picking its way
up the grassy slope toward him, moving like a pale cloud bank.
As it came closer, Phaethon saw, within the ice, several concentric shells or spheres of crystalline
armor. Deep in the smoky depths was a web of nerve tissue connecting four major brains, and at least a
hundred lesser subbrains, nerve knobs, ganglia, synthetic cells, relays, and augmentation clusters.
The nerve tissue within the ice was in motion, some tendrils of brain matter expanding, forming new
nodes and knobs; and others contracting, creating an impression of furious mental activity.
Closer it came.
-=*=-
Elsewhere, Helion was also discontented.
In Aurelian mansion, seven entities of very different schools, life principles, neuroforms, and
appearance were meeting privately. They had three things in common: wealth, age, and ambition.
The Seven Peers were actually sitting in a tall, many-windowed library, with thought-icons on the
oak-paneled walls. Each Peer saw the chamber differently.
The most recently admitted Peer was named Helion Relic (undetermined) Rhadamanth Humodified
(augment, with multiple synnoetic sensory channels) Self-composed, Radial Hierarchic Multipartial
(multiple parallel and partial, with subroutines), Base Neuroformed, Silver-Gray Manorial School, Era 50
(The Time of the Second Immortality).
He was the only manor-born present, and was more than a little pleased that his school, the
Silver-Gray, was singled out from among the other schools of the manorials for this dignity.
Helion's self-image wore the costume of a Byzantine imperator from the time of the Second Mental
Structure, with a many-rayed diadem of pearly white and robe of Tyrian purple.
"My Peers, it is with great pride and honor I take my place among you. I trust that the legal issues
surrounding the question of my continuity of identity are acceptable to everyone here?"
There was a signal of concurrence from the Peers, which Helion's sensorium interpreted as nods and
murmurs of assent.
"Gentlemen, we are the Peers and Paramounts of this civilization. The Golden Oecumene has given us
every benefit she can give. Now we must protect her. We must make certain that the events that so
recently shook our society to her roots -- events that only we Seven now recall -- never recur.
"We Seven represent the wealthiest nonmachine fortunes ever to exist in time or space. If we do not
act -- then who?
"I submit that we have reached a golden age, a time of perfection and Utopia: to maintain it, to sustain
it, no further changes can be allowed. Adventures, risks, rashness, must receive no further applause from
any voice in our Oecumene. Only then will we all be able to keep our wayward sons at home, safe from
harm.
"At your leisure, you may examine my detailed findings; how many people we can influence, what the
possible results are of various forms of art and persuasion we can bring forth during the celebration. I
draw your attention, for example, to the ecoperformance at Destiny Lake, formulated by the sister-mates
of our Peer, Wheel-of-Life. Even those who do not apprehend the direct analogy involved there will be
subliminally made uneasy by the type of erratic and selfish heroism which that work of art condemns.
"This is merely one example of thousands. The computer time available to my Manor house can
generate specific anticipations running to many orders of magnitude. Merely human minds will not be able
to outwit the kind of persuasive campaign I envision. If enough people are persuaded of the truth of a
proposition before the Transcendence, surely that will be remembered during the Transfiguration, surely
that will shape the outcome after.
"The Age of Tranquility, dreamed of for so many aeons of so much turmoil and pain, has come! My
Peers, history must be called to an end!
"Examine my proposal, my Peers. Look at the future I have drafted. It is one where the College of
Hortators is backed by the full power of the Seven Peers."
-=*=-
THE NEPTUNIAN
Phaethon addressed the giant being: "Pardon me, sir, if I am intruding, but could you tell me, please, if
you saw a man come by here just now? He looked like this...." and he opened up channel 100, the
common-use channel, and downloaded a few hundred frames of images and sensoru-media from his
recent memory into a public temporary file. He had an artistic subroutine add background music,
narrative comments, and some dramatic editing for theme and unity, and then he transmitted the images.
Phaethon felt the tingle of his nape hairs as his name was read (he still had not put his mask back on),
and then a signal came in on a high-compression channel, saying: "This is the translator. My client is
attempting to convey a complex of memory files and associational paths which you either do not have the
ability to receive or which I do not have authority to transmit. The amount of information involved may be
more than one brain can apprehend. Do you have stored noumenal personalities, backups, or
augments?"
Phaethon signaled for identity, but the Neptunian was masked. "You have me at a disadvantage, sir. I
am not accustomed to revealing the locations of my mind-space to strangers, and certainly not my
resurrection copies." Phaethon wanted an answer to his question, and would have preferred to remain
polite, but the request that he open his private thoughts was extraordinary, almost absurd. Not to mention
that the Neptunian reputation for eccentric pranks was too well known.
"Very well. I will attempt to convey my client's communication in a linear format, by means of words,
but only on the understanding that much substantial content, and all secondary meanings, nuances, and
connotations will be lost."
"I will be tolerant. Proceed."
"My initial data burst consists of four hundred entries, including multidimensional image arrays,
memory respondents and correlations, poetry, and instructions on nerve alterations for creating novel
emotional receiving structures in your brain. These structures may be of use later for appreciating the
emotions (which have no names as yet in your language) which other parts of the communication will then
attempt to arouse. The initial burst contains other preliminary minutia.
"Then follows a contextual batch of six thousand entries, including volumes of art and experience,
memories and reconstructed memories, real and fictional, intended to give you and him a common
background of experience, a context in which certain allusions and specifics will be best understood.
Other greetings and salutations follow.
"The first entry of the core message contains rote formalities of time-sense and identity continuity,
establishing that you are, in fact, the same Phaethon of my client's acquaintance, or, in case you are a
copy, reconstruction, or simulation, to ascertain the relative degree of emotional and mental
correspondence with which my client must regard you. The core message itself--"
"Pardon me," said Phaethon. "Did I know your client before he joined your Composition?" He
amplified his vision (opening additional wavelengths) to look curiously at the several brains and brain
groups floating in the icy substance.
"The Neptunian legate produces an emotion-statement of three orders of complexity, with associated
memory trees to show correspondence, but otherwise does not respond to your question, which he
regards as fantastic, disorienting, and not at all funny. Pause: Should I explain further about the emotional
reaction, or shall I continue with the central message of the first datagroup? The process could be
considerably sped if you will impart your command codes and locks to give me direct access to your
neurological and mnemonic systems; this will enable me to add files directly into your mind, and alter your
temperament, outlook, and philosophy to understand my client in the way he himself would like to be
understood."
"Certainly not!"
"I was required to ask."
"Can you make your summary more brief? The man I'm asking about is someone who -- well,
perhaps he offended me, or -- this man said some confusing things, and he -- well, I'm trying to find him,"
Phaethon finished lamely.
"Very well. My client says: I (he forwards, as an appendix, a treatise on the meaning of the word 'I,'
the concept of selfhood, and a bibliographical compendium of his life experiences and changes in his
self-notions in order to define this term to you) greet (he also has side comments on the history and
nature of greetings, the implications in this context of what is meant, including the legal implications of
violating the ban placed on his initiating any contact with you) you (and he postulates a subjunctive inquiry
that, should you not be the individual that he deems you to be, that all this be placed in a secondary
memory-chain, and be regarded as a less-than-real operation, similar to a pseudomnemia. He also
requests sealed and notarized confirmation on his recorded memorandum documenting that you initiated
the contact without his prompting)."
"Stop! You are only three words into the first message, and already everything is obscure. What
prohibition has been placed on him? By whom? The human race is finally mature, wise enough to reject
coercion as a means to deal with each other. Where is there any institution, any curia, that is not
voluntary, not based on subscription? Our militia was supported by donations from historical trusts. Who
has any right to prevent your client from speaking with me? Who is your client? Tell him to remove his
mask."
"My client responds with an emotion-action statement of four orders of complexity, all in the
hypothetical-subjunctive mode, which states, in brief, that were he forbidden to speak with you, there
may be (granting for the sake of argument) monitors or directives eavesdropping, which, were there such
a thing, would not interfere as long as this discourse is kept within the general boundaries of polite and
innocuous discourse. Of the seventy-four thousand million possible outcomes of this conversation which
my client has examined in predictive scenarios, over fourteen of them conclude by some sort of
interruption or reaction from the Aurelian Sophotech. Would you care to examine the full text of my
client's reply, examine the extrapolation scenarios which he has calculated, or should I continue with my
disquisition of the core message?"
This was the most fantastic yet. Phaethon put his mask back on, which acted as a signal to restore a
zone of privacy around him, even hiding such information as was normally public, such as his name and
appearance.
"Surely no one would be so rude as to intrude on our private conversation, not without some good
reason!"
"My client wishes to download a philosophical question-and-debate routine to attempt to convince
you that, even in the most enlightened and civilized of societies, reasonable men can differ as to what
constitutes the good. For example (and here he once again indicates that he speaks only hypothetically)
those who place a higher value on freedom than on the alleged security and meaningfulness which
adherence to tradition provides, might be willing to tolerate, or even encourage, a certain small amount of
crime and riot, danger and uncertainty."
Phaethon knew Greek and Latin, English and French, and half a dozen other dead languages, and so
he knew what the word "crime" meant; but he had never heard it used except as a metaphor for
unacceptable rudeness, or for poorly executed works of art. A paleolinguistic routine from the
Rhadamanthus Mansion-mind had confirmed the original meaning of the word and had inserted it into
Phaethon's short-term memory.
He had his memory replay the last message over more than once to reassure himself that there had
been no error. Was this creature actually advocating that the use of violence or fraud against innocent
beings was, in some measure, justified?
The translator persisted: "Will you open, at least, a holding space where he can put some of the
conversation trees he has constructed on this topic for you?"
"Sir, forgive me if I seem abrupt. But my main question, about the man who accosted me, lingers
摘要:

THEGOLDENAGEbyJOHNC.WRIGHT(2002)[VERSION1.2(February272006).Ifyoufindandcorrecterrorsinthetext,pleaseupdatetheversionnumberby0.1andredistribute.]DRAMATISPERSONAE    Groupedbynervoussystemformation(neuroform)BiochemicalSelf-AwareEntitiesBaseneuroform    PHAETHONPRIMEofRHADAMANTH,Silver-GrayManorialSc...

展开>> 收起<<
John C. Wright - Golden Age 1 - The Golden Age.pdf

共183页,预览37页

还剩页未读, 继续阅读

声明:本站为文档C2C交易模式,即用户上传的文档直接被用户下载,本站只是中间服务平台,本站所有文档下载所得的收益归上传人(含作者)所有。玖贝云文库仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。若文档所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知玖贝云文库,我们立即给予删除!
分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:183 页 大小:563.78KB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-23

开通VIP享超值会员特权

  • 多端同步记录
  • 高速下载文档
  • 免费文档工具
  • 分享文档赚钱
  • 每日登录抽奖
  • 优质衍生服务
/ 183
客服
关注