POST-HUMAN SERIES BOOKS 1-5
BY DAVID SIMPSON
Copyright ⓒ 2019 David Simpson
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, names, incidents, organizations, and dialogue in this novel are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any Web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author.
Contents
1: Sub-Human
2: Post-Human
3: Trans-Human
4: Human Plus
5: Inhuman
Book 6 Excerpt
Message from the Author
PROLOGUE
Interviewer: With us is presumptive Presidential nominee, Senator Morgan, for his first major interview since sweeping the Super Tuesday primary contests less than twenty-four hours ago. Congratulations on your victories, Senator and for locking down the nomination so quickly.
Morgan: Thank you very much, Anderson.
Interviewer: Now that your opponents have suspended their campaigns, are you surprised at all with how quickly you’ve managed to dispatch your competition? You were, after all, facing two candidates that were far better funded than yourself throughout most of the early primary season. Yet here we are in the middle of March, and you’re already uncontested and headed for the general election.
Morgan: I’m not surprised at all, actually, given that the stakes were so high. The choice was crystal clear for voters, and they resoundingly chose to cherish and protect human life. No amount of funding would have been enough to confuse the issue for the American people in the primaries, and no amount of funding will be enough to confuse it for them in the general election either.
Interviewer: By ‘protecting human life,’ you are, of course, referring to your signature issue—that being that you want to outlaw what is known as strong artificial intelligence.
Morgan: It’s not just my signature issue—it’s the most important issue in the history of our species. It’s about species dominance—
Interviewer: And the ‘history of our species’ is 6,000 years? Since Adam and Eve?
Morgan: Listen, Anderson, I’m not going to play that game. This is too important—
Interviewer: I’m just trying to clarify—
Morgan: No, you’re not. You’re doing a hit job on me, as I knew you would.
Interviewer: I’m just clarifying—
Morgan: You’re doing a hit job for the incumbent—the President of the United States—as I expected.
Interviewer: Senator, you said during the primaries that you believed in Adam and Eve—
Morgan: I’m not going to be debating theology or my personal religious beliefs with you, Anderson. I am not taking that bait. What I am going to do is voice the concerns of the majority of Americans, whether your friend the President likes it or not.
Interviewer: I cannot deny, Senator Morgan, that you have voiced the concerns of about half the American electorate. Stats have shown that 47 percent of Americans say they strongly oppose the development of strong A.I., which is part of why you were able to use your unofficial status as the head of the Purist movement in the United States to beat back your better-funded opponents.
Morgan: The Purist movement is bigger than any one man.
Interviewer: Well, it may be bigger than you, sir, but you must admit that it was your wedge issue.
Morgan: You think you’re so clever, don’t you?
Interviewer: Excuse me?
Morgan: You do. Admit it. You ask me questions and smirk away, but you have no idea what’s coming. You and your pseudo-intellectual establishment. The people of this country know what’s coming. They know the choice that they have in this election. That’s why I accepted the invitation to be here today. No amount of personal character assassination against me is going to confuse this issue in the minds of the American public.
Interviewer: Okay, so let’s discuss the issue at hand, then.
Morgan: All right.
Interviewer: It’s your position that the United States should use its power within the new Democratic Union to push for a ban on artificial intelligence worldwide, correct?
Morgan: Let’s be crystal clear, because this is a crucial point.
Interviewer: Okay.
Morgan: It’s not my position that we should use our power to push for a ban—it’s my position that we should use our power to insist on a ban. And I am not personally against the development of artificial intelligence. A.I. is all around us—
Interviewer: Yes, I was going to ask you about your own personal use—
Morgan: I’m not against artificial intelligence. What I’m against is strong A.I. I am against artificial intelligence that is capable of passing the Turing test and that has the potential to become infinitely more intelligent than human beings.
Interviewer: But, Senator, A.I. is already stronger than us at most types of thinking—
Morgan: Most types of thinking? I don’t know where you’re getting your information, Anderson, but that’s simply not true.
Interviewer: Okay—many types of thinking—is that a fair statement?
Morgan: It’s faster, sure.
Interviewer: So, if computers have already surpassed us in many respects, isn’t the Turing test an anthropocentric and, therefore, irrelevant way of evaluating—
Morgan: No, it’s not. The Turing test determines whether or not a computer is conscious. That’s the whole point of it.
Interviewer: Don’t you think that might be debatable?
Morgan: We don’t have time for that type of academic debate.
Interviewer: No time for debate, Senator?
Morgan: The Turing test is the only agreed-upon—
Interviewer: No time for debate in a democracy?
Morgan: Let me finish. The Turing test is the only agreed-upon test in which all parties agree that, when a computer passes it, that computer will have reached human levels in all respects. We won’t have any cognitive advantages over a machine like that—we’ll be demoted to the second-smartest species on the planet. Like the dolphins. Ask them how that worked out for them.
Interviewer: So your position is that the United States will unilaterally decide to ban artificial intelligence if you’re elected president?
Morgan: I never said that.
Interviewer: You said the United States should insist on a ban.
Morgan: We should.
Interviewer: The rest of the Democratic Union doesn’t agree with that position.
Morgan: That’s not true.
Interviewer: It is true, Senator—
Morgan: No, it’s not. Sure, there are countries within the D.U. that disagree, and we’ll negotiate with those countries—
Interviewer: You said “insist.”
Morgan: The United States has the most influence of any D.U. nation. If we take a moral stand, I have full confidence that the D.U. will follow our lead.
Interviewer: Even if that’s true, China will never agree to abandon—
Morgan: I don’t know about that.
Interviewer:
They have openly stated their position that they will continue developing strong A.I., regardless of the D.U. position on the matter.
Morgan: As President, I will not let China threaten us—
Interviewer: They’ve issued no threat, Senator.
Morgan: Yes they have. If they develop strong A.I., not only will that threaten international security, but it will also threaten our species.
Interviewer: How have they threatened international security?
Morgan: A strong A.I. would quickly be able to find a way around our defenses. That’s why they want to develop it in the first place—to threaten us.
Interviewer: With all due respect, Senator, aren’t you the one who’s issuing threats?
Morgan: Absolutely not, Anderson. I’m simply doing what the American people expect me to do—defending humanity from an existential threat.
Interviewer: Isn’t this—
Morgan: I’m glad you find this amusing.
Interviewer: I’m sorry, but aren’t you being a little dramatic?
Morgan: I don’t find the security of the American people and the security of the people of the Democratic Union funny, Anderson. I take it very seriously. If your friend, the President, were to take it seriously, he’d back me up and insist on a comprehensive, strong A.I. ban.
Interviewer: Let’s talk about that proposed ban. The election is almost eight months away, Senator, and even if you win, you won’t take office until January of next year. Meanwhile, IBM already has a working simulation of the human brain. Some experts are saying now that this simulated brain might be able to pass the Turing test before the end of the next President’s first term. How do you intend to implement measures draconian enough to stop multinational companies from following through on the development of these technologies?
Morgan: By any means necessary.
Interviewer: Excuse me, Senator, but I am a bit taken aback. Isn’t that the kind of talk that has caused some people to label you as an extremist?
Morgan: Your network has labeled me as an extremist. The American people haven’t.
Interviewer: Senator, I resent that. We’ve always been fair—
Morgan: Fair? The man who owns your network has donated to the President’s campaign already, has he not?
Interviewer: He has. Full disclosure for our viewers. That’s true.
Morgan: He’s got his toes dipped in every major technology company there is.
Interviewer: That’s an unfair generalization—
Morgan: It’s worse than selling his soul. If he just sold his soul, so be it. He’d burn in Hell. Serves him right. But this is worse than that. He’s selling out his species. He’d end humanity. He’d see a world that is post-human, as long as he lived to see it inside a computer—
Interviewer: Senator Morgan—
Morgan: He’s not just a traitor to America—
Interviewer: This is really—
Morgan: He’s a traitor to the species—to his own species!
Interviewer: Senator Morgan? Please—okay. Senator Morgan has walked out on the interview. He’s certainly started the general election campaign with a bang, that’s for sure. We’ll see how voters respond. A fiery outburst of a self-proclaimed Purist, or the extremism of a fanatic? The American voters will decide in November.
PART 1
1
WAKING UP for the first time from nano-infusion treatment was a disorienting and altogether unpleasant experience for Dr. Craig Emilson. The feeling of nausea was overwhelming.
“Don’t try to stand up,” said the young doctor as she lightly pressed her palm against Craig’s chest and kept his back against the small bed on which he lay. “We have to do a quick test first.”
“I’m fine, really,” Craig replied as he tried to get up once again.
Again, the young doctor kept him horizontal. “Dr. Emilson, try not to be such a stereotypically bad patient for the next minute and just let me help you.”
Craig smiled. “You can’t turn off being a doctor.”
“Pretend,” the young doctor replied. “I have to make sure the respirocytes are operating and, since this is your first nano-infusion, it’s important that I show you how they work.”
“I know how they work,” Craig replied. “My wife builds them.”
“She what?” asked the doctor, her routine suddenly interrupted by the interesting tidbit.
“My wife works with Professor Gibson. She makes respirocytes, so I already know all about them.”
“Hmm,” the doctor eventually responded after a barely perceptible moment of disappointment. “Then you know how important the Freitas test is?”
“Uh...”
The doctor smiled, flirtatiously. “Ha! So, you don’t know everything, Smarty Pants! We have to test the respirocytes and activate the pressure tanks to get the oxygen and carbon dioxide flowing, and there’s only one way to do that.”
“The Freitas test?”
“That’s right,” the doctor replied triumphantly. “And do you know how we administer the Freitas test?” She seemed to be beaming.
“No clue.”
“We get smarty pants like you to hold their breath.” The doctor’s teeth were nearly perfectly white and straight; her smile was gorgeous. “Ready?”
Craig grinned, acquiescing. “Okay. I’m ready.”
“All right,” she said as she held her small tricorder in front of Craig and watched the screen for information on the progress of the tiny, robotic red blood cells that were now flowing through his veins. “Hit it.”
Craig inhaled and then began holding his breath.
“You didn’t have to inhale,” the doctor observed.
Craig’s eyes darted to her questioningly.
“Just let it out nice and slow, but don’t inhale again when you’re finished.”
Against all of his instincts, Craig began to let out his breath nice and slowly, just as he had been instructed.
“You’re married, huh?” the doctor asked, apparently rhetorically. Craig nodded anyway. “That’s a shame. You’re way too handsome to be married. Handsome young doctors like you should be single. Then single doctors like me could marry you instead.”
Craig’s eyebrows rose in surprise at the forward come-on, but there was something about the young woman’s demeanor that seemed to make it innocent enough. He took it as a compliment and smiled.
“You feel that?” the doctor asked him.
Craig wasn’t sure what she was referring to. His first instinct was that her forwardness was starting to cross a boundary. Just as he was going to speak, ruining the Freitas test for the sake of politely cooling the woman’s jets, she spoke again.
“No shortness of breath. You could keep this up for four hours before you’d need to take another breath. Congratulations. You’re officially a super soldier.”
The notion of being a superhuman hadn’t crossed Craig’s mind until that moment. It was surreal. What she said was true: He’d felt no shortage of breath. Like most technological marvels, it was difficult for him to fully grasp it, so he just accepted it with a slightly marveled shake of his head.
“So what happens when they run out of air?” he asked.
“The respirocytes will...” She smiled again as she thought of the absurd euphemism bubbling to the surface. “...expel themselves.”
“Ah,” Craig replied.
“You can get up now.”
Craig sat up as the doctor uploaded her results onto a larger wall screen behind the small bed. “Thanks. That was...different.”
She smiled. “Now you can tell your wife she’s doing good work. The fruits of her labor are breathing for you. When you’re ready, just start breathing again and the respirocytes will shut down.”
Post-Human 5 Book Boxed-Set: (Limited Edition) (Plus Book 6 Preview Chapters) Page 1