It's the future, Jim, but not as we know it...

There's more to tomorrow than robots, flying cars, and a faster internet.
22C+ is all about Deep Futures, futures that matter. Welcome to futures fantastic, unexpected, profound, but most of all deeply meaningful...

Showing posts with label fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fiction. Show all posts

Friday, May 13, 2011

Killing Einstein’s Brain


 If you are squeamish or don’t like the “F’ word, don’t read this. You have been warned.

With apologies to the great man….


Dr Franz Doppler calmed himself and stepped quietly forward onto the two footprints imprinted on the ultra white floor. He had waited for this day for fifteen years, and he knew that he could not let his excitement get the better of him. Excitement meant elevated levels of cortisone and adrenaline in the blood, and that was sure to be picked up. There was a slight whirring sound as Syntho read scanned his iris.

“Good morning, Dr Dad,” the quiet feminine voice of Syntho greeted him as usual. As the creator of Syntho, he had programmed it to call him by that affectionate name. Far too busy for children himself, was Professor Doppler

“Good morning, Syntho.”

Doppler tried to keep his voice as calm as possible. He knew Syntho was compiling a data set on him with each piece of information he provided. This day was too important to have the system shut him out as a security threat. He recalled the day five years before, right after his wife had left him. Syntho had pinned him good that day. He hadn’t been permitted within fifty metres of the Core. For a moment his thoughts filled with the recollection of completely losing it - and calling Syntho a “Fucking retard.” That resulted in two hours of expulsion from the Lab. There was no time for that today. This was, he reminded himself, the greatest day in twenty first century science.

As C Door slid open and he passed into the inner Lab area, all thoughts of the past left him. This was the moment. The moment.

His moment.

Stet Johnson, his well meaning assistant was already at the outer core, awaiting him.

“Good morning Stet. Have you prepared the Domain?”

“All ready, sir. There isn’t a microorganism within a hundred metres of us. Sterile as your grandaddy’s goolies.”

A slightly pained look crossed Doppler’s face. “I think you mean 'infertile.' And Stet, not today. Please. This is being recorded by Syntho. Historians will one day scan the archives. And what will they be hearing? Talk of the triumph of modern science? Vindication of the Quantum Genome Project? No. Their minds will be filled with images of an old man’s testicles. Give it a rest.”

“Sorry, sir.”

“Now, the Director and party will be here at precisely 3 pm. That gives us a window of precisely two hours. The University Vice Chancellor and His oldest living relative will be here to witness Cognitiation.”

“The initiation of cognition.”

“I know what it is. I coined the term, Stet.” A slight furrow was developing upon Doppler’s brow as he looked at the hulking figure of his lab assistant before him. Stet was around two metres tall, gargantuan, towering over Doppler’s trim but aging figure.

“Sorry, sir.”

“Forget it. As long as the specimen is prepared.”

“Of course, sir.”

B Door slid open and the two men entered Core B. Only a total of nine people had ever entered that deep. That one of them was a hulking Neanderthal was of considerable distaste to Franz Doppler, PhD. Every other human intellect that had stood upon that hallowed ground had had an IQ of 175 or more, and at least two PhDs. But someone had to do the grunt work, and Stet had been at the Lab right from the start. He was the best man.

To the right side of the circular room, there was a row of dull coloured lights. Doppler strode up to the wall, took a deep breath, and pressed a red button. Ever so slowly the panel slid out. There was a slight passing of cool air from the refrigerated cabinet. Within a minute the panel had ceased to move, revealing in full view the clear glass container before them.

“So this is it, sir. This is His brain.”

Doppler pretended not to hear the idiotic question. His eyes were feasting upon the exquisite prize before him.

The brain of Albert Einstein.

“Just think, Stet.” Doppler waved a hand over the jar. “Just one square millimeter of this cerebral cortex once held more mental power than your entire cognitive architecture combined.”

“Yes, sir.”

 For a moment, Doppler thought he saw something dark, like a shadow cross Stet’s complexion. But he let it go. It wasn’t like the technician could understand what he had just said, after all.

Doppler stood before Him in awe. That the Institute had managed to acquire His brain after a dozen years of legal hassles and the expenditure of millions of dollars of funding, was a triumph of the human will.

Though he had seen the brain three times previously, it never ceased to inspire him. The apotheosis of consciousness had been born and had died within those exotic peaks of intertwining gyri, those rivulets of deep sulci. What greatness was before him! Yet it was greatness passed. That immensity had ceased to exist, extinguished by a cruel,  mechanical cosmos.

A tear came to Doppler’s eye as the thought finally came to full realisation. Today was the day that Einstein’s consciousness would be reborn. The greatest mind in history would live again. Finally, years of exorbitant funding by secretive Chinese and Indian trillionaires and magnates, and after paying off deluded special interest groups determined to kill the project, finally the day was here! Combining cutting edge quantum theory with advanced genetics, Einstein’s mental circuitry could finally be transposed onto a quantum computer interface.

He would live!

As he stood there transfixed at the sacred artifact before him, Doppler felt something electric within himself. An excitement stirred from within, like a teenager opening his first pornographic web site. It was an emotional set he barely dared to acknowledge.

“Stet, I need you to get me my glasses. They are on the desk in Core D.”

“Yes, sir.”

Doppler knew he didn’t need the glasses. They were for long distances only. He just needed to be alone for a moment.

Alone with Him.

It was perhaps thirty seconds after Stet had disappeared through B Door that Doppler found his hands caressing the lid upon the jar. Slowly, with each turn, he found himself closer, closer, to that climactic moment.

With a gentle twist the lid came off. Shuddering slightly, Doppler gently lowered his hand into the glass jar. Then contact. The fingers of his hand caressed the softness of Albert Einstein’s brain. The sinews. The fleshiness like perfection to the hand. He closed his eyes, a wave of ecstasy filling him. The mind of Einstein at his finger tips!

“Got them!”

With a sudden shock Doppler realised Stet was standing directly behind him. He ripped his arm from the jar, like a teenage boy found being intimate with his girl. The movement was jerky, rapid. Unplanned. His hand knocked the side of the jar. For a moment the clear vessel teetered, balanced delicately, then tipped. First the liquid poured softly over the panel, flowing gently to the end, and spilling onto the floor. Then, in slow motion, followed His brain; slipping quietly out of the jar where it has rested for 140 years. Doppler watched, frozen with horror as it moved, seemingly born of its own volition, sliding towards the edge. Then it was gone, falling in free space.

Doppler saw his arms flailing before him, like the last slow motion scene in a horror movie.

And then the plop.

“My God!”

The neuroscientist raced around to the other side of the plate where the brain had dropped. As the disheveled, fallen mind of Einstein came into his vision, his foot made contact with the vital fluid which had spilled from the jar. He lost control, spiraling forward, arms swinging crazily. He saw it coming, seeming to rise before him. The brain edging closer, through the emptiness of the quantum vacuum. Doppler moved his arms aside in time, but alas the full weight of his torso thrust forward onto His brain, landing with a great squelch of fluid and preserved organ, cerebral matters squirting out at both sides, where his hips landed on Einstein’s brain.

Stet stood there. Leaning over Doppler, the giant of a man barely knowing what to do.

“Are you OK, sir?”

Doppler tried to stand, only to slip once again in the mixture of fluid and brain pulp. His head hit the floor face first, and he tasted it. He tasted the brain of Einstein. He rolled over, his hands caked in cerebral matter; best suit, polished shoes and thinning hair covered in the brown sludge of the Great One. He looked up at the giant before him.

“You! You did this! You fucking killed Einstein! Do you realise what you have done!?”

Stet blinked, a strange mixture of comedy and horror pulsing through his system.

“No, sir. Judging by the stains on your trousers, you should be the last person accusing anyone of fucking Einstein.”

Doppler stood, weeping, sighing, trying desperately to wipe the brains from his coat and tie. He gathered a chunk of left brain in his small, trembling hand and held it before him.

His superior parietal gyrus. Look at the quality! You can just feel the density of the axons. This… this is what enabled Einstein to imagine a deep connection amongst far flung objects within the cosmos.”

Stet half stood, half stooped, as if trying to make his giant frame invisible.

“If you say so, sir.”

Einstein’s superior parietal gyrus slipped through Dopler’s fingers. “You stupid overgrown imbecile! If you hadn’t snuck up behind me and startled me, this never would have happened!”

Stet recovered himself, brought himself erect. “I didn’t do any sneaking, sir. Seems to me you were the one doing the sneaking. I thought you said never to touch the brain!”

“That’s none of your damn business, idiot. The fact is we’re all fucked now. The Director will be here in an hour, along with the media. My career is finished. What are we supposed to tell them? I fucked Einstein’s brain? Hey! Got a spare genius’ cerebral cortex hanging round?”

Stet thought for a moment. Then it came to him. His eyes lit up.

“Just replace it with another brain! Buy time. They will never know. There must be another one lying round here somewhere.”

“What have you got upstairs? Shit? Brains don’t grow on trees you know. There is a very prolonged procedure in getting hold of a brain. Forms to fill in. Approval at several different levels. And that’s not talking about the brain of an Einstein. Even the brain of, say, a retarded monkey like you takes two weeks.” Doppler stood there sobbing, a broken man covered in the mashed brains of a great German physicist.

“Of course!” Doppler suddenly stood upright, and after a breath spun round and headed for  the back of the room. He pressed a small button upon the wall, whereupon a small, square door slid open. Doppler reached into the safe box and pulled out two dark objects.

The next thing Stet Johnson saw was the crazed eyes of Professor Franz Doppler moving stealthily towards him. In one hand was a knife, in the other a gun.

“What… What the hell?”

“I knew these would come in handy one day. You can never be too safe these days.”

“But…”

"You’ve got something I need, Stet. Sure, it’s a little lightweight, but it will have to do.”

“No! You’ll never get away with it!” Stet backed away stumbling as he tripped over a waste paper basket, his backside hitting the floor with a thump.

Doppler stood over the big man, the last remains of Einstein’s visual cortex dangling manically from the few wisps of hair left on his freckled forehead.

“Think about it, sir! I’m just an ordinary guy!”

“Unfortunately for you, yours is the only cerebral matter close at hand.”

“Bullshit! What about your brain?”

“Unfortunately, I’ll be needing it for a while, so I’m gonna borrow yours. Quality isn’t the prime concern at this point. I just need a brain.”

“Shit, I need it too!”

“Don’t get yourself worked up, Stet. Not only have you undoubtedly set off every circuit on Syntho’s security matrix, the adrenaline rush will saturate your neocortex, making immediate preservation difficult.” Doppler waved the gun in Stet’s face. “Relax.”

Stet kept shuffling backwards, pushing himself with his great feet across the polished floor.

“It’s all bullshit anyway. All this. You’re fucking mad. You can’t upload consciousness onto a computer!”

Doppler stared for a moment. “So, what are you now? Deepak Chopra or something?”

“Think about it. There’s no direct evidence that consciousness emerges from the brain. Einstein is dead. Whatever he was is now gone.”

“Well, his brain is gone. Thanks to you.” Doppler wiped a dried smear of Einstein from his left cheek, and continued. “I’m surprised. Where did you learn all this stuff? I know you. You’re an oversized janitor.”

“I’ve been doing an online masters in educational psychology. There’s a bit of philosophy of science in it.”

“Fucking philosophers. Tell me one useful damn bit of information you pathetic morons have come up with in the last two centuries? Nothing. Just regurgitating all the same old bullshit over and over again. Well, let me enlighten you. If it doesn’t come from a lab, if the numbers can’t be crunched, then it ain’t real. So fuck off. Putting a bullet in you will be doing the world a favour. One less philosopher asking pointless questions that go nowhere.”

"You shouldn't swear so much."

"Tell that to Jesus."

Stet scanned the room, looking for something – anything - he could grab to throw at the madman before him. He had to buy time.

“Where did Einstein’s thoughts come from? You know. Relativity theory and all that.”

“Don’t make me laugh!” Doppler did exactly that, letting out a prolonged chuckle. “Now I’m discussing physics with the cleaner! Gimme a break.”

“So, where did they come from?”

“From his brain, you idiot. Where else could they possibly have come from?”

“I dunno. Ask his brain now. It’s still here – a little messed up, admittedly.”

With that Doppler looked down at the rapidly drying cerebral matter on his brand spanking new Italian suit. That was enough. With surprising speed for a big man, Stet Johnson grabbed the waste paper bin and threw it full force at Doppler’s head. There was a great clang of metal on forehead, and Doppler went down.


“Jesus Christ!” programme Director David Stevens muttered as Stet led him into Core B. He had managed to hold off the party, and Einstein’s great, great, great, great granddaughter, convincing them there had been a security scare at the Core.

Stevens covered his nose in disgust, suppressing the need to vomit. The lifeless carcass of Fritz Doppler lay before him.

“There’s something in his hand,” Stet noted. “What is it?”

 Stevens moved gingerly closer, clutching a handkerchief to his nose.

“Looks like the postcentral gyrus.”

“Oh?”

“Einstein’s sensory cortex.” He nodded approvingly. “You’ve got to admire that about Franz. A brilliant man, clutching at data till the end.” He stood up abruptly. “We’ll have to keep this accident a secret, you know. There’s billions tied up in this programme. Nobody can know what happened here today. Syntho will be wiped clean for these couple of hours.”

“Yes, sir.”

“And one more thing. We’ll need a brain…”

They both turned and looked down at the still figure of Franz Doppler, a tiny smile crossing his face as he lay at one with the mashed brains of his Beloved.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

"Light". A new novel by Marcus T. Anthony: Chapter 1


And now for something completely different! I am going to publish my novel Light chapter by chapter here on 22c+. I'll also put up a book icon on the home page, and that will include links to all the chapters, as they go up. There should be one or two chapters a week.
Light is a semi-autobiographical allegory. Many of the things written in Light actually happened. But some didn't. Some “events” in the novel occurred in my life within psychic space, not real space-time. If you want to work out which parts are true and which parts are fictional, use this rule of thumb: If the event is considered paranormal, it probably happened. ;-)
You’ll find many of the themes in Light mirroring those in my other more “‘serious” writings: exploring the frontiers of mind and intelligence, psychic and spiritual experience, the nature of society and education etc.
Light is the story of Greg Marks, who has several profound experiences which completely alter his sense of who he is and what he is capable of doing. He discovers that beyond the door of the physical world lies a powerful intelligence; a great light. As his “abilities” develop, he comes to realise that there are those who would prefer he remain quiet…
Please enjoy, and feel free to leave feedback, including critical feedback!

***

Chapter 1: Ruminations
There was a time when I wasn’t that bright. Seriously. Not like today. It wasn’t just that I didn’t know what I know now. I couldn’t do the things I can do now. Couldn’t know what I know now. In fact I couldn’t even imagine most of it. If someone had come up to me and told me that they could do what I can do now, I would have called the nurses on them.
The changes came slowly. Then when I started to understand what was happening, I worked out how to tweak it. That’s when the trouble began. People don’t like it when you show them up. And they get shit scared when they know you can see right through them, see that they are fake. That their world is fake. Then, when your very existence threatens the system, they want to eliminate the threat. That’s how I ended up dead a few times.
How can I begin? It’s when he sits down and actually starts tapping on the keyboard that a writer realises he has a decision to make. The choice is about depth. How deep should he go in revealing himself?
Yeah, that’s a bit sexist. A writer can be female. I know that. So if you are a woman, go ahead and sue me. I am a dead man anyway.
Let’s face it, we all wear masks. All of us. How much do we really let others know about our inner lives? How many secrets do we hide? Even from ourselves?
How much about someone do you really want to know? How deep do you want to go? If you stuck a camera in someone’s eye that could record everything he said and did, how interested would you be in seeing what the camera reveals? What if that little device could also record the thoughts of that guy? Would that turn you on?
Or would you turn it off?
Now, what if we take that idea right down, deeper than you have gone within your own mind. Imagine that you are able to peer right into the guy’s soul, into the dark country within him that even he has never dared venture?
There’s more. Maybe that tiny little hidden camera can record not only the sights, words, sounds, conscious thoughts and subconscious machinations of our unsuspecting friend’s mind, but then also reveal the very hearts and souls of all those other people around him.
I am the man who discovered the camera. I just didn't realise that it would cut right into the heart of the universe itself, and flay wide and broad the secrets of the cosmos. All those secrets.
I had to learn how to turn it off. If only I could forget.
Think about it. If all were revealed, would you stay, or would you take flight?
Before you call me mad, I have a story to tell.
OK, so there is no camera. What I learned doesn't require a machine.
I tell this story now because my own time here is limited, and what I discovered is something that should be told.
Must be told.
I said I’m going deep. I’m going to tell you everything. Well, almost everything.
Maybe there is no right time for something like this, and in revealing almost all I will likely be putting an end to my own existence in this world. I have already paid dearly, and all that I once knew and loved has been taken from me. But I was a different person then.
I got into a bad habit of dying too often. That was the problem.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

A Lucid Mind

    And while I'm a on a roll... I had ten hours on the train from Geneva to Berlin today. I went through some truly beautiful countryside, especially in Switzerland and southern Germany. The train was very cozy, and I managed to squeeze out this little tale. It's not so much about the future, but touches upon some of the themes I regularly write about.  There's a little bit of the paranormal, an invitation to step into the unknown, and even a little sexual tension. And no, this blog is not going to become a short story blog. I will simply post fiction, and maybe even poetry, here from time to time. 

A Lucid Mind 
By Marcus T. Anthony



“Relax Miss Lee, this won’t hurt a bit”, smiled Martin Ku as he ushered the pretty young woman to her seat.
    “I certainly hope not”, she smiled back. “They aren’t paying me enough for that.”
    “Hmm, we have something else in common then, besides, our distant ancestors in the Far East”. Dr Ku sat down at his desk, some distance from the woman. “So how long has it been since you were in Shanghai?”
    “Haven’t been back since we left when I was six years old. I can barely remember anything,” Veronica Lee confessed. “What about you?”
    “I hate to say, but I have never been to China. I’m third generation Chinese American. In fact my mother was only half Chinese.”
    “Oh, I thought there was something a little mixed up about you the first time I saw you.” Veronica giggled.
    “Too right, Miss Lee. I can’t speak a word of Chinese either. I’m as American as a hot dog at Yankee Stadium.” Dr Ku shuffled his papers. “I’d love to chat some more, but I am on a tight schedule today. I assume you are aware of the procedure?”
    “I believe I’ve been told just about everything.”
    Dr Ku picked up a large, thick envelope. He removed the string around it, and pulled out what looked like an oversized deck of cards. “It’s quite simple really. On the back of these cards there is a single number between one and ten. I’m going to pull one card out at a time. Your job is to guess the number on the card I am holding. Got it?”