Stargods Ian Douglas (best e ink reader for manga .TXT) đ
- Author: Ian Douglas
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âTruitt.â Gray nodded. âDifficult man . . . but brilliant.â
âHis number two is Commander Samantha Kline. Sheâs worked with Dr. Truitt for a long time.â
âI remember Sam,â Gray said. âAnd, of course, we have you. If you three canât figure out what the aliens are saying, nobodycan.â
âYour expression of confidence is gratifying, Admiral. Some of the Nâgai species are more easily understood than others . . . the Baondyeddi, for example. The Adjugredudhra, and the Groth Hoj. All three of those species have developed robotics to a surprisingly high degree, and with it an expertise both in cybernetics and in cerebral implant technology. That means that despite the differences in physiology and in culture, their psychology, at least, has been partly shaped by computer technology. And that makes them accessible.â
âYouâre saying that talking to a big, blue-eyed pancake might be impossible,â Gray said, âbut if that pancake has computerimplants, then communication is easier because we have AIs and electronic implants ourselves.â
âEssentially, yes. We would possess both primary and secondary channels of communications.â
âAdmiral,â Randâs voice said in his head, interrupting. âExcuse me, sir, but weâre about to go into Alcubierre Drive.â
âThank you, Captain. At your discretion.â
For just over an hour, America and her escorts had been crowding the speed of light as they hurtled outbound from Earth. Now, their relativistic massesalready distorting local spacetime, and with the metric of local space flat enough to allow them to kick over, they engagedtheir space-bending drives. Crumpling the fabric of space forward, lengthening it astern, they in effect created tight littlebubbles moving through space many times faster than light . . . but within which each ship obeyed the inviolable laws of Einsteinrelative to its immediate surroundings.
One of Grayâs office walls was set to display the view outside . . . a motionless panorama of the stars ahead distorted byAmericaâs forward velocity into tight bands of light. Seconds later, the scene turned black as the carrier wrapped itself up in itsown private, bubble universe.
Gray switched the view to a generic scene on Earthârugged cliffs with a cascading waterfall and rainbows dancing in the mist.
âSo, tell me, Konstantin,â he said. âWhat do you know about the impending Singularity on Earth?â
âI do not have the same scope or depth of information of my previous iteration,â Konstantin replied. âI can give you the short version.â
âIâm not looking for exhaustive detail,â Gray said. âJust what you know in general.â
âMore than anything else, I would have to say, is a heightened sense of awareness, a deep-seated belief that the TechnologicalSingularity is about to occur, and that it could take place at any moment. It is a popular topic of conversation and of research,both throughout the Global Net, and within the Godstream. Many believe that the Godstream itself is the beginning of the Singularity,a kind of private universe where people can create their own realities.â
Gray nodded. He was familiar with the idea, though he didnât buy it. To him, it seemed foolish to collect all or most humanminds within a matrix that required maintenance from the outside and protection from possible marauders. The Baondyeddi hadretired into an artificial reality within a planet-sized computer within Heimdall, a world circling what was now KapteynâsStar . . . and as nearly as could be determined, they had been snuffed out by the Consciousness. The Satorai at Tabbyâs Starwere another, their K-2 Dyson sphere civilization destroyed, their organic components lost due to a vicious e-virus attackby their extremely powerful neighbors at Deneb.
Some observers speculated that if organic humans vanished down an electronic rabbit hole, their intelligent machines couldremain behind and protect them. Again, Gray was skeptical. Why should highly intelligent and self-aware mentalities spendthe rest of eternity protecting their human creators whoâd abdicated themselves from the real world?
Why would they even care what happened to Humankind?
âSo people think theyâre going to vanish into the Godstream,â Gray said.
âSome do. Not all. Opinion on Earth has become increasingly polarized since the end of the Shâdaar War. There may be as many ideas of what the Singularity will be as there are humans to imagine them, and there is little agreement. There is a new religious sect called âthe Singularists.â Youâve heard of them? They interpret the Singularity in the same way as the fundamentalist Christians of past centuries thought of the Rapture, believing that humans will vanish from Earth to live immortal lives in other dimensions with their AI âgods.â Another group calling itself âthe Transcendentalistsâ believes humans will create doorways into alternate dimensions or pocket universes or into computer-generated artificial realities. âThe Cosmistsâ see humans merging with AI machines so completely that telling the difference between the two would be impossible. The âNirvanistsâ believe that super-AIs will transform Earth into a kind of celestial paradise, giving humans immortality and godlike control of their environment as they do so. The âGoddAIâ agree with Walker, at least in part. For them, the Singularity happened in the 2040s, when the first computer minds became smarter than humans. That was the original definition of the Singularity, by the way. And then the âHumankind Firstersâ believe the super-AIs will simply exterminate all humans and evolve themselves into something Transcendentââ
âOkay, okay, I get the picture,â Gray said, holding up a hand.
âThe only real point of agreement,â Konstantin added, âseems to be the idea that whatever happens, Humankind will be so completelytransformedâTranscendedâthat what it means to be human will be unrecognizable from anything we understand today.â
âThat agreement isnât enough, though, right? These different groups are fighting each other?â Gray had heard stories of majorclashes, of rioting, even of pogroms in various countries.
âA few. Most groups seem content to let things take their natural course. The most serious conflict is between those humans convinced they are about to ascend to a new existence, and those who insist the Singularity is not going to happen at all.â
âWalker and his the-Singularity-already-happened nonsense. The Internet. I know.â
âNot complete nonsense, no,â Konstantin told him. âThe Internet, beginning in the last decade of the twentieth century, maybe the most profound development in Humankind since the taming of fire. It
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