Tuesday, March 12, 2019

The Highest Evolution of Economic Order*

We always knew this day would come. I mean, it's inevitable, right? That's how entropy works, that's how consumerism works.
You try to accumulate potential even as potential must naturally ebb away. You try to accumulate stuff, but the more stuff you have the less it means. The Law of Diminishing Returns should be written in letters of fire across the sky, hundreds of kilometers high.
They'd burn out eventually, of course. The Law is universal.
Well. As soon as people started to figure out that the planet is a circle, a cycle, a snake eating its own tail, there's been a big push to get off it. Never mind that they're all running to another planet that is, itself, another closed system, they're just trying to get away and "get theirs" before somebody else gets it, and try to die with more than average. Doesn't matter, what the "more" is, they just want it.
I'm not quite alone on this world. It's a pretty nice world, or it was before the inevitable industrial cycle, repeated now so many times in so many places. Fire, wheel, wood, metals. More fire. Electricity, a variation of fire when you think about it. The heat economy, the information economy and finally the long, drawn out shuddering orgasm of everybody who can scrape up enough money, spurting off the surface of the world just as fast as they can, just as soon as they can see that the party is nearly over, that economies and cultures cannot grow anymore. They run away, knocking themselves, paradoxically, back to a barely more than primitive state, on some strange new world where humans have never been, and start over.
I'm not exaggerating a lot when I say "fire and wheel," either. Settling a new world with only a few hundred thousand colonists, with what little technology they can carry with them, there are small pockets of technology while those hardier souls that venture out to the frontiers of those new worlds do it with even meaner means to their names. Some of them have to relearn how to make fire.
And then there's always us. We're the ones who don't run.
We could if we wanted to. There's always a few of us who stay behind on a smoothly shaved planet, in a reamed out husk of an asteroid. Always some who opt out of the panic.
You see, it's one thing to say that the world is depleted. In many important respects it is. There's metals still to be found in this world's crust - there's no possible way to get them all, let's not kid ourselves - but it's too much trouble to do. Dig much deeper and you get to discover what the world's molten mantle smells like. There are no hydrocarbons left to combine with liquid oxygen to power rocket engines off the ground, although I suppose you could, with a bit of work, power an ancient ground car with what could be scraped together. Not that you would - solar power works fine and has for generations - but I suppose it could be done.
So here I stand on this reamed, raped planet, me and a few million other people. "Plucked bare," the news reports said. "Tapped out," the economic analyses decided. Okay, if you say so. Take your last load of shipmates and go.
With the sound and fury of all that commerce, all that technology and striving and wild eyed desperation finally gone, one can feel oneself cooling off.
I've said before that money is the heat of the friction of the engines of commerce. The hotter they run, the more money there is - but what of it? It's people that make the engines go. It's people that commerce is about, and money in addition to being a side effect is also the product while also being a means of keeping track of whose engine is running harder. What happens when all the commerce, the engines and their noise and heat go away? What's left?
Me. That's what's left. On a planet nearly devoid of human life - a few million counts as nearly devoid, on this scale - you can feel yourself cooling off as the heat and noise all go thundering off into the dark. Let them go.
"Depleted" doesn't mean "dead." The soil's pretty good, it rained yesterday and my tomatoes are coming along. I'll have beans in a couple of weeks and once I've finished hoeing these weeds out of the corn, there's a hammock under the shade of a pair of maple trees just waiting to take the load off my back. It'll feel especially good when I've earned the break.
I've got all the resources I could ask for. I've got mine. It isn't much, but it is certainly more than enough.

*Originally published on Reddit in r/WritingPrompts

Saturday, March 2, 2019

Lost in Transition*

He looks around himself and attempts to concentrate. He blinks several times as his eyes focus.
He has pain. That was to be expected so the pain is not a significant concern. The Automated Resuscitation System - ARS - is going through its steps to assess his condition.
He is responding to the directions. He is holding still for the tests. He holds still for the injections. He is answering the questions.
"This body feels acceptable."
"There are general aches, but nothing unexpected."
"He remembers that he is on a slower-than-light sleeper interstellar spaceship. He remembers his name: Richard P. Winkler."
"He doesn't understand the question."
"He doesn't understand the question."
"His cognitive processes seem to be functioning normally."
"He doesn't understand the question."
The ARS finishes its evaluation. It has more questions but he need not stay in the cryogenic chamber to answer them. The ship's intercoms follow him throughout the passageways as he opens lockers, dresses in the clothes he finds there, and begins addressing the checklists that will prepare the ship and the rest of the sleepers for the end of the trip.
"His cognitive processes seem to be functioning normally."
"His name is Richard P. Winkler."
"He is speaking normally."
"He does not know."
The ARS' line of questioning is illogical. His cognitive processes are functioning normally, but the ARS continues to explore his certainty of that fact. It will not accept his assertion that his behavior is normal, that his identity is established. The ARS may have malfunctioned during its extended down time. He will examine it during a scheduled discretionary period.

...

Checklist one is complete. Three sleepers have died during the transition. The bodies have been recycled and the appropriate notations entered into the log. He recognized two of their names; one was a Ship's Engineer's Mate. The other was a colonist. Neither of their sleep pods had malfunctioned.
One sleep pod had malfunctioned. The sleeper within had suffocated before she could disengage the pod's life support systems. He did not recognize her name. She had damaged the umbilicals; he has recycled the body and repaired the pod. Its self-check routine is underway and will be complete in seventy-three minutes.
The remaining three hundred fifty-six pods report that their sleepers are in acceptable condition. Two pods are out of specification and will require refurbishment before they can be used again.
The ARS continues to explore his assessment of his own mental health and acuity. He answers its questions.
"He is in acceptable health."
"He is allergic to tree nuts."
"He has not eaten any tree nuts."
"He graduated from the University of Utopia twenty-eight years, three months and two days ago."
"He majored in Mechanical Engineering with minors in Electrical Engineering and Aerospace Medicine."
"His ambition was to become a Ship's Engineer."
"He is Ship's Master Engineer, assigned to the Interstellar Expansion Administration colonial sleeper ship Peregrine."
"He will consider the hypothetical circumstance."

...

The second checklist is complete. The colonists' equipment has undergone the transition with nominal damage. One loader's battery packs had degraded beyond its specification. He replaced it. Access to the pack was time-consuming and required revising the estimated time to completion of the checklist. He has reached another discretionary period. The exertions required by the pack's replacement have necessitated inactivity during the discretionary period.
He is considering the hypothesis proposed by the ARS. The ARS asserts that his responses, while nominally acceptable, lack qualities that are expected in responses that would be assessed by the ARS as fully normal. The ARS asserts that his responses are not fully normal and are indicative of a dissociative state or other psychological malfunction.
"He understands what 'ego' means."
"No."
"No."
"Yes."
"Play the recording."
"Hey! This is Master E Rick Winkler, folks, and I'm going to give you a quick rundown on a couple of details before the Captain takes the mic away. Peregrine is the first of her kind, equipped with both the higher-impulse Gen Five light plasma drives and the Sanatana cryo pods. We're going to go faster and you're going to sleep deeper and we're all going to arrive at Luyten B in just under 125 years. Interestingly, even though the Pitseolak Ashoona left twenty years ago, we'll be arriving at about the same time. These engines are that good.
"I'm told that in testing these Sanatana pods are way better than the older models. You know what they say: "twenty years asleep in a pod feels like a month in Purgatory." Not these pods, folks. You're going to wake up at the other end thinking they didn't work and we're still around Titan. Don't be fooled! You're going to close your eyes, open them, and we'll be approaching Luyten B. It's going to be a great trip."
The ARS is comparing behavior observed in the recording to his current mode of behavior.
"He remembers making the recording."
"He does."
"He does."
"He cannot."
"He cannot explain why egotistic expression is no longer present."
"Without testing that hypothesis' validity cannot be established."
"Begin the resuscitation."

...

The ARS is waking a colonist. The colonist is a psychological counselor and spiritual pastor. His name is Uri D'Angelo. He may have insight and experience that can explain the alteration in Winkle's mode of behavior.
"His name is Richard P. Winkler."
"His name is Uri D'Angelo."
"He has directed the ARS to resuscitate Uri D'Angelo out of sequence so Uri D'Angelo can render psychologically rehabilitative assistance to Richard P. Winkler."
"He observes dissociative cues."

...

Uri D'Angelo has died. He suffocated when he exited the airlock. There was no allowance on the body disposal checklist for this circumstance. He has made the appropriate notations in the log.

...

The ARS asserts that his psychological health is poor. The ARS asserts that both Richard P. Winkler and Uri D'Angelo were in acceptable psychological health before entering cryosleep. The ARS asserts that the acute dissociation of two formerly psychologically healthy individuals is statistically unlikely.
He asserts that two instances are an insufficient sample.
He overrides the ARS' safeguards and will wake three more sleepers. He cannot choose random numbers. He achieves randomness by rolling dice. He does not know their names.

...

The three woken colonists have died. One died of either hypovolemic shock or cessation of lower brain function after overriding a hatchway safety interlock. The hatch closed on his head.
He has recycled the body. Bone shards trapped in the hatch rails forced a closer motor overamp condition. Its breaker opened and has been reset. He has cleaned the hatchway.
The other two colonists have killed each other. One exhibited associative behavior and was responding to the ARS' questions when the other approached her and stabbed her with a knife. She took the knife away from the colonist and stabbed her in turn. Both died of hypovolemic shock. He has recycled the bodies and made the appropriate notations in the log.
He does not know where the knife had been. Knives are part of the colonists' supply manifest but none had been stored in the personnel spaces during the transition.
The ARS expands its line of questioning.
"He does not know what a soul is."
"He does not know if he has a soul."
"He does not enjoy his current state. He knows what joy is. He cannot feel joy."

...

He has set the scuttling program to begin opening atmospheric valves in five minutes. He has disabled the cryo pods. The sleepers will die without waking. They will not experience the dissociative state. The ARS asserts that they are incomplete persons, that they are unhealthy. Unhealthy people are not suitable colonists.
He has made the appropriate notations in the log.

*originally posted on Reddit in the r/Writing Prompts forum