Mar 4, 2026

The Quiet World

Tarynon on Asha.
 Shown in my previous blog post is a planning session with Claude concerning what to include in Chapter 5 of the science fictions story "Plūribus ē Spatium". Below on this page is Claude's 4,900 word-long draft of Chapter 5 of "Plūribus ē Spatium".

Chapter 5 of "Plūribus ē Spatium" – The Quiet World

Scene 1: The Hierion Femtotube

Asha Simulation, Year 8

The morning light on Asha had a quality that Marda had never quite gotten used to, even after eight years. The sun here burned a fraction more orange than Earth's sun, and in the early hours it painted the lake shore in colors that had no precise names in any human language she knew. She had tried once to describe it to the Tyhry replicoid and the replicoid had said, with characteristic Tyhry bluntness, that it looked like the inside of a very comfortable apricot. Marda had laughed for a long time. She still did, when she thought of it.

She was standing on the aft deck of Sedrover, the ship's hull warm against her back from the previous day's sun. Below her, the new settlement of Ashapor spread along the lakeshore in an easy curve, its buildings low and wide and already beginning to acquire the particular settled look of places where people are genuinely happy. Gardens had been planted between the buildings. Children were already running between the bean rows with the focused urgency of children who have important business that adults cannot be expected to understand.

Eight years. The buildings were done. The gardens were producing. The children were growing. Sedrover had served its purpose as the colony's first home and now sat on the landing apron at the edge of the settlement like a well-loved tool that had earned its retirement. Marda did not think Sedrover deserved retirement. Sedrover deserved to be back in space.

The hatch behind her opened and the Tyhry replicoid emerged carrying two cups of tea. She handed one to Marda without ceremony and leaned on the rail beside her, looking out at the settlement with the expression she used when she was thinking about something she had not yet decided to say.

Marda said, "I want to take Sedrover out."

"I know."

"The colony doesn't need it anymore. They have houses, they have food, they have each other." Marda gestured at the settlement below. "They have more than enough of each other, in fact."

The Tyhry replicoid sipped her tea. "You want Sedrover back in space, exploring."

"Alexina and Amiante have been extraordinarily patient. The crew has been patient. Even Anthony's replicoid copies have been patient, and you know how Anthony feels about being domesticated." Marda turned to look at the replicoid. "My problem is that I don't know how to extract Sedrover from the Simulation. I've been thinking about it for two years and I cannot figure out how it can be done. We are inside an accelerated Simulation running inside the Sedron Domain. Sedrover's physical structure in here is composed of zeptites. I can walk out of this Simulation using my femtobot recall function, but that function was designed for an object the size of a person, not an interstellar spacecraft."

The Tyhry replicoid was quiet for a moment. Then she said, "There may be someone you could ask."

From behind them both, a familiar voice said, "There is, in fact."

Marda turned. Manny was seated in one of the deck chairs that Lori had installed on Sedrover's aft deck during the first year of the colony, insisting that a spaceship without deck chairs was a missed opportunity. Manny was wearing her preferred form for visiting humans — extraordinary hair, the comfortable physical presence of someone who has arranged her zeptite components with the specific goal of putting biological creatures at ease — and she was holding a cup of tea that had not existed a moment ago.

"I wondered when you would appear," Marda said, with only mild surprise.

"I've been watching your progress with great pleasure," Manny said. "Eight years. You've done beautifully. The colony is healthy. The telepathic bonds are developing exactly as I hoped." She gestured towards the settlement. "Tarynon's generation is going to be remarkable."

"That remains to be seen," Marda said. "But first, Sedrover. Tell me how to get it out."

Manny set down her tea. "The Asha Simulation is a bumpha Simulation running inside the Sedron Domain. Everything inside this Simulation — including Sedrover — is composed of zeptites, not hadrons. The ship's physical structure here is a precise zeptite replication of the original hadronic Sedrover that exists in the hangar on Earth. The Ekcolir Reality Simulation, where your laboratory and Sedrover's hangar are located, runs inside the Hierion Domain. Those two Domains are normally quite separate." Manny paused. "However, the Phari developed a technology for bridging them. It is called a hierion femtotube."

Marda said, "I've never used one."

"You haven't needed one until now. A hierion femtotube is narrow — far too narrow for hadronic matter to pass through. It will not allow you or any biological matter to transit. But the zeptite components of the simulated Sedrover can disassemble, pass through the femtotube in sequence, and reassemble in the hangar on Earth. The process takes a few hours for an object of Sedrover's size." Manny reached into the pocket of her garment and produced a small device, which she placed on the deck rail beside Marda. "The femtotube anchor. Place it against Sedrover's hull at the engineering access panel on the port side. The Phari designed them to be intuitive to operate. Your femtobots will understand what to do when you make contact with it."

Marda picked up the device. It was warm in her hand in the way that hierion-based technology sometimes was. "And the femtotube stays open after Sedrover exits?"

Manny smiled. "Yes. The tube will remain open. You will be able to re-enter the Asha Simulation whenever you choose, and exit again, and re-enter. Think of it as a door that stays unlocked. The colonists will not be able to use it — their biological bodies contain hadronic matter. But you, as a femtobot replicoid, can pass through it freely."

"And the original Sedrover in the hangar — it will fully reassemble from the zeptite components?"

"The original Sedrover is composed of hadronic matter. The zeptite Sedrover's exit through the femtotube will provide the programming instructions needed to update the original. Think of it as a very thorough calibration." Manny picked up her tea again. "I should mention one other thing. I arranged it so that a copy of Tyhry's nanotechnology laboratory will serve as the receiving end of the femtotube, inside the Ekcolir Reality Simulation. When you are ready to leave this Simulation entirely and return to Casanay, you will exit through the laboratory, just as you have done before."

The Tyhry replicoid had been listening to all of this and now spoke. "What about us? The crew members who remain here on Asha after Sedrover leaves?"

"You are femtobot replicoids," Manny said. "You may exit and re-enter using the femtotube whenever you choose. Whether you remain on Asha or return to Earth is entirely up to you." She looked at the Tyhry replicoid with an expression that contained something warmer than scientific interest. "I rather hope some of you will stay. Tarynon's generation needs teachers. And not only in the obvious subjects."

Marda turned the femtotube anchor over in her hands. "When should I do it?"

"Whenever you are ready." Manny stood. "The colonists understand that Sedrover was always going to leave eventually. You told them as much in the first year. They will be sad to see it go and then they will have a party to cheer themselves up and then they will go back to their gardens." She paused. "They are very good at going back to their gardens."

There was something in Manny's tone that Marda filed away for later consideration.

"One more question," Marda said. "The Tyhry replicoid and I have been discussing the spaceship project. After Sedrover leaves, I intend to challenge the colonists to build their own spacecraft. Yrmya is right there in their sky. A second habitable world, reachable. It seems like it should be an irresistible challenge."

Manny looked at Marda for a moment with an expression Marda could not quite read. "That is an excellent experiment," she said at last. "I look forward to seeing what you discover." She set down her tea cup and was gone, between one moment and the next, as she always left.

The Tyhry replicoid looked at the empty deck chair. "She knows something she isn't telling you."

"She always knows something she isn't telling me." Marda closed her fingers around the femtotube anchor. "Let's go find Anthony and tell the crew. And then let's go tell the colonists that Sedrover is going home."


Image by Leonardo.
By mid-afternoon Sedrover's decks were crowded with colonists who had come to say goodbye to the ship that had been their first home on Asha. Lori stood at the base of the landing ramp with Tarynon, now eight years old, on her hip. The child had her mother's dark eyes and a quality of attention that always made Marda feel slightly observed, as if the girl was listening to more frequencies than her ears could account for.

"Will Sedrover come back?" Tarynon asked.

"Maybe someday," Marda told her. "But by then, I hope you'll have built your own ship."

Tarynon considered this with the gravity that eight-year-olds apply to large propositions. "A ship that goes to the orange star?"

"That orange light is Yrmya," Marda said. "Another whole world. A whole planet, just waiting."

Tarynon looked at the evening sky where Yrmya was just becoming visible as a faint orange point of light above the western hills, then looked back at Marda with the expression of someone who was being politely patient with an enthusiastic adult. "We have Asha," she said simply.

Marda placed the femtotube anchor against the engineering access panel on Sedrover's port hull. The device warmed against her palm and she felt her femtobots respond to it with a precise sequence of instructions that required no translation. She stepped back. After a moment, a faint shimmer passed along Sedrover's hull from stem to stern, like light moving through water.

Then, in absolute silence over the course of the next four hours, Sedrover ceased to exist on Asha. The colonists watched, some holding hands, several of the children openly crying, until the last shimmer faded and the landing apron held nothing but the warm afternoon air and the shadows of the surrounding trees.

In the hangar on Earth, Sedrover reassembled from its zeptite instructions and was ready to fly.


Scene 2: Years of the Quiet World

From Marda's research log, Year 12 of the Asha Simulation:

G-sim integration proceeding normally across all birth cohorts. Tarynon now twelve. Her telepathic range is developing faster than any of the Ek'col-lineage children, which supports the hypothesis that the femtozoan-G-sim interaction is amplified by certain gene combinations we did not anticipate. She shows strong telepathic bonds to Lori, to her age-cohort, and — interestingly — to me. I am not certain what to make of the last item. She seeks me out for conversation more than any of the other children do. I find I do not mind.

Population note: 312 individuals. Growth rate 23% below the projected baseline. Investigating contributing factors. No obvious health issues detected.


From Marda's research log, Year 24:

I have been trying to understand the low population growth rate. The telepathic adults of Asha do not appear to have reduced their reproductive activity in any measurable way. The shortfall is explained instead by an unusual pattern of reproductive decision-making. Couples who are deeply telepathically bonded seem to feel — and I can find no better word than "feel" — that their family is complete at a smaller size than the baseline projection assumed. When I have asked about this, the answers I receive are consistent: "We know." They say it without drama, without anxiety, with the same tone one might use to say that the beans are ready for harvesting. They know. The femtozoan's access to the Sedron Time Stream appears to be providing them with a dim but real sense of the family they will have, and when that future family feels complete, the biological urgency to add to it simply... quiets.

I find this both elegant and troubling. I am not yet sure in what proportion.

The artistic output of the colony continues to be extraordinary. The weavers of Ashapor have developed a textile tradition in twelve years that would take a conventional human culture a century. The music is remarkable. Last night Tynyo led a gathering of forty people in a performance that I am fairly certain would reduce any audience on Earth to tears. I sat in the back and watched and tried to remember that I was here as a scientist.

I mostly failed.


From Marda's research log, Year 38:

Naseh has asked me for the third time this year whether I can modify the femtotube passage so that biological humans could use it to visit Earth. I have explained, again, that hadronic matter cannot pass through a hierion femtotube. She accepted this with her usual equanimity and then returned to her weaving.

I think what she actually wants is not to visit Earth. I think she wants to know that Earth is real. The younger colonists — those born here who have never seen any other world — have a complicated relationship with the concept of the Simulation. They know they are inside it, because we have told them. Most of them believe us. But "believing" and "feeling it as real" are different things, and for the Asha-born, the Simulation is simply their world. It is warm and it has good food and it is full of people they love. The epistemological question of whether it is a Simulation does not, in their daily experience, seem to matter very much.

Ely finds this philosophically interesting. I find it a data point.

Population: 1,847. Growth rate remains below baseline. I have stopped being surprised by this.


From Marda's research log, Year 52:

I have identified two students who are worth noting.

The first is Oryen, a young man of twenty-two who is the son of Tynyo and Naseh. He came to me three years ago because he wanted to understand how the G-sim worked at the femtobot level. Most of the colonists use their telepathic abilities the way they use their hands — without wanting to know the underlying biology. Oryen wanted the schematics. He has since become the most technically capable person on Asha outside of the replicoid crew members, and he has a quality of focused curiosity that reminds me, sometimes, of Tyhry. Not the same person — quieter, more patient — but the same quality of attention.

The second is Veth, a young woman of nineteen who is Tarynon's closest friend. She came to me because she was interested in the night sky. Specifically, she was interested in Yrmya. "Why is it a different color than the other lights?" she asked me, and when I explained that it was a planet, a whole other world orbiting the same sun as Asha, she went quiet for a very long time and then said, "I want to go there."

I told her that building a ship to reach Yrmya was exactly what I had been hoping someone would want to do.

She has not yet stopped wanting to go.


The conversation that Marda had with Oryen and Veth in Year 60 took place on the roof of the research laboratory, after sunset, with Yrmya hanging in the western sky like a small orange lantern.

"Here is the challenge I want to put to you," Marda said. She had thought carefully about how to frame this. She had thought about it for years. "Yrmya is habitable. I have run every sensor analysis available to me and it will support human life. It has breathable air, liquid water, a stable climate. It is approximately the same distance from Asha as the Moon is from Earth — close enough that a reasonably capable spacecraft could reach it in a matter of weeks. I want you to build that spacecraft."

Oryen looked at Yrmya. "What resources would we have?"

"Everything that is available on Asha. Materials, equipment, my help and the help of the other crew members, access to everything I know about spacecraft engineering." Marda looked at both of them. "What I cannot do is build it for you. The point of this project is for the people of Asha to build it themselves."

Veth said, immediately, "I want to start tomorrow."

Oryen said, more carefully, "We would need other people. Other engineers. Other builders. We would need Asha to be interested in this project."

"Yes," Marda said. "You would. That is part of the challenge."

Image by Leonardo.
They looked at each other. Veth was already planning. Oryen was already calculating the difficulty of what Marda had just described. Both of them understood, with the particular clarity that comes from being immersed in a telepathic community, that getting Asha interested in building a spaceship was going to be the harder problem by far.


From Marda's research log, Year 72:

Twelve years since I issued the Yrmya challenge to Oryen and Veth. Progress report:

Oryen and Veth have recruited eleven additional engineers and builders. This group, which they have named the Yrmya Circle, meets three times a week in the workshop adjacent to the research laboratory. In twelve years they have designed a credible spacecraft and begun fabrication of several key components. At the current pace of work, a functional prototype could be completed in perhaps another twenty years.

Twenty years. For a project that I had hoped would capture the imagination of an entire colony.

The broader Asha community knows about the Yrmya Circle and is supportive in the way that people are supportive of a neighbor's unusual hobby: with genuine warmth, occasional questions at community gatherings, and no personal desire to participate. Yrmya is visible every clear night. Marda has heard the colonists refer to it sometimes as "Oryen's star," with affectionate pride in their community's eccentric engineer.

They are proud of Oryen and Veth. They simply cannot understand why anyone would need to go there.

I have been trying to understand this for years. I think I am beginning to.

The telepathic bonds of Asha are deep and rich and genuinely beautiful. What I have watched develop here over seventy years is a form of human community that is, in many ways, more connected and more humane than anything I have seen on Earth. When someone grieves on Asha, the whole community knows it and gathers around the grief. When someone creates something beautiful, the pleasure of it ripples outward through the telepathic network like a stone dropped in still water. Nobody is ever truly alone here. Nobody is ever truly unknown.

But nobody is ever truly surprised, either.

The future that the Sedron Time Stream quietly whispers to these people is not detailed. It is not a map. It is more like a warmth in a particular direction, a gentle certainty that the people they love will still be there tomorrow and the day after. For the people of Asha, that certainty does not feel like a cage. It feels like home.

What it does not feel like is a reason to get into a spacecraft and fly toward an orange light.


Scene 3: What Marda Cannot Say to Tarynon

Asha Simulation, Year 80

Tarynon had her mother's habit of choosing a particular quality of outdoor light for difficult conversations. In Lori's case it had always been the late afternoon. In Tarynon's case it was early morning, when the mist was still rising off the lake and the settlement was only beginning to stir and the world had the specific quality of not yet having committed to the day.

She and Marda sat on the long bench at the edge of the community garden, with cups of tea that Anthony's replicoid had provided, as he provided all things, with the quiet efficiency of someone for whom no request was too small. On the lake, the first boats of the morning were moving. From somewhere inside the settlement, someone was playing a stringed instrument with the unhurried skill of a person who has been playing for sixty years.

Tarynon was eighty years old and looked thirty. Her femtobot replicoid body had not aged since young adulthood. She had her mother's dark eyes and a quality of settled self-possession that Marda had been watching develop since Tarynon was eight years old on the day Sedrover left. She was, by any measure, a remarkable person. She was wise and warm and deeply loved by everyone in the community and she had not, in eighty years, once expressed an interest in going to Yrmya.

"You wanted to talk about numbers," Tarynon said.

"Population numbers," Marda said. "Yes."

Tarynon nodded, as if she had been expecting this conversation for some time. Which, Marda reflected, she probably had. "You think we are not growing fast enough."

"The original projection assumed a growth rate based on a community of healthy, long-lived adults with no resource constraints. You have everything you need. You have been here for eighty years." Marda looked at the settlement. "By now there should be three times as many people."

"We know the families we will have," Tarynon said, gently. "It is hard to explain to someone who doesn't experience it. It isn't that we don't want children. We love our children. But when a family feels complete, it feels complete in a way that is... very convincing."

"I know," Marda said. "I've been watching this for fifty years." She paused. "I want to ask you something directly, Tarynon. When you imagine the future of Asha — not your personal future, but Asha as a civilization — what do you see?"

Tarynon looked at the lake for a long time. The boats moved slowly in the mist. The music continued from inside the settlement.

"I see this," she said at last. "More of this. More people, more gardens, more music. The community getting deeper and richer over time." She paused. "Is that wrong?"

"It's not wrong," Marda said carefully. "It's beautiful, actually. What you've built here is genuinely beautiful." She turned her cup in her hands. "But I want to ask you about Yrmya."

Tarynon smiled, and the smile contained a warmth that Marda recognized as the specific warmth people use when they are being patient with someone who keeps returning to the same question. "Oryen and Veth are making progress."

"In twenty years they might have a prototype. The two of them and eleven others, out of a community of four thousand people." Marda looked at Tarynon. "When I issued that challenge twenty years ago, I thought the idea of a whole other world to explore would be irresistible. I thought the Yrmya Circle would grow to include hundreds of people."

"People here are not incurious," Tarynon said, with a slight edge that Marda had never heard from her before. "We simply have different questions that feel more urgent to us. How to be better partners to the people we love. How to grieve well. How to make the music better." She turned to face Marda. "Are those lesser questions?"

"No," Marda said, and meant it. "They are not lesser questions. I've sat with your community for eighty years and I can see clearly what you value and why, and it is not nothing. It is not small." She stopped. Then, with the honesty that had always characterized her relationship with Tarynon: "But I am afraid that it is not sufficient. Not for what the future of humanity requires."

Tarynon was quiet. Her telepathic bond to Marda was deep enough that she understood, without being told, that Marda was not criticizing the people of Asha. She was worried about something larger. Something that Marda herself was not certain how to name.

"Tell me," Tarynon said.

Image by Leonardo.
"There are millions of habitable worlds in this galaxy. The plan — the very long plan, that began before either of us existed — is for humans to spread to those worlds. Not because the bumpha want us to. Because we won the right to, through our own history, at great cost." Marda set down her cup. "That plan requires humans who want to go. Who feel the pull of what they don't yet know. Who look at a light in the sky and think: I have to find out what is there." She looked at Tarynon. "Your community looks at Yrmya and thinks: we have Asha. And Asha is enough."

Tarynon did not answer immediately. When she spoke, it was quietly. "And you think this is because of the G-sims we received at birth."

"I think the access to the Sedron Time Stream that a birth G-sim provides quietly removes the specific kind of uncertainty that makes people want to explore. You still have curiosity. You still have creativity. But you don't have the productive anxiety of genuinely not knowing what comes next. And it turns out that productive anxiety might be exactly what sends people toward unknown worlds."

Tarynon looked at the mist on the lake. The music from the settlement had stopped and then started again, a different piece now, more complex. Somewhere among the garden rows, the morning's first children were running with their important business.

"What would you change?" she asked.

"I don't know yet," Marda said, honestly. "I want to consult with Tyhry. The original Tyhry, who is on Asha of the Final Reality. I think it is time for us to compare what I've learned here with what she has been observing there." Marda paused. "I may want to try something different with the next generation. Not providing the G-sim at birth, but later, when a child is old enough to choose it, and old enough to have developed their own relationship with the unknown."

Tarynon absorbed this in silence. Then she asked, in a voice that was careful and a little careful: "Will children without a birth G-sim be able to bond telepathically with their parents when they are young?"

"That's one of the things I need to discuss with Tyhry. I don't want to take away the early bond between a mother and an infant. That bond is precious." Marda looked at Tarynon. "I am not sure yet what the right answer is. But I think the Asha Simulation has taught me what one wrong answer looks like, and I am grateful for that, even if it is not the result I hoped for."

Tarynon nodded slowly. She reached out and took Marda's hand and held it, as she had done sometimes since she was a small child. Her telepathic mind pattern was warm and clear and complicated with things she was still processing.

After a while she said, "I hope you will come back."

"I will," Marda said. "I promise. And Tarynon — I want you to know something. Whatever we decide to change in the next generation, it will not be because what you have here is a failure. It is not a failure. It is a particular answer to a particular question, and it is a good answer to that question. It is just not the only question."

Tarynon squeezed her hand and released it. On the lake, the morning mist was lifting at last. The boats moved out of the shadow of the hills into the full orange light of the Asha sun.

Marda stood. "I'm going to exit through the femtotube this morning and return to Earth. I want to find Tyhry."

"She is on Asha," Tarynon said. "The real one."

"Yes. The real one." Marda looked down at Tarynon, eighty years old and eternally young and woven into the fabric of this warm, still, beautiful world like a thread that belonged exactly where it was. "I'll tell her what I've found here."

"Tell her it is worth seeing," Tarynon said. "Even if it is not the answer."

Marda walked back through the settlement, past the gardens and the low buildings and the children who were now well advanced in their morning business, and she did not look back at the orange light of Yrmya hanging in the western sky, because she knew that if she looked back at it she would feel, just for a moment, the specific sadness of a world that was right there and that no one particularly wanted to reach.

She went into the laboratory, placed her hand on the femtotube anchor, felt her femtobots respond to it with the same precise instructions they always gave, and stepped through.

In Tyhry's nanotechnology research laboratory in the Ekcolir Reality Simulation, the air smelled of machine oil and the distant tang of sedron fuel and the particular electric quality of equipment that has been running for a very long time. Anthony's replicoid was at a workbench, not doing anything in particular, and he looked up when Marda arrived with the particular expression he used when he was not going to mention that he had known she was coming.

"Anthony," Marda said. "I need to get back to Casanay."

"Of course," he said. And that was all.

End Chapter 5 (Claude's first draft)

Next: My edited draft of Chapter 5. 

Images by WOMBO Dream, Google Flow and Leonardo. Visit the Gallery of Movies, Book and Magazine Covers

Claude with Memory

A memory of Tyhry Watson.
Today I noticed that the Claude LLM now has available what they call "memory" for people like me who use Claude under to free option. I activated this 'memory' feature and began experimenting with it. I don't really understand exactly what having this sort of new memory function means, but I want to believe that Claude will now begin automatically remembering some parts of our discussions. Having recently completed a science fiction story titled "The Sims" in collaboration with Claude, I decided to discuss that story with Claude. I provided Claude with a 542 KB file that had the full text of "The Sims" (a edited PG version), but no additional background information. The discussion quickly expanded to include my current work-in-progress, the story "Plūribus ē Spatium".

Me: Claude process the file that I uploaded and then let's discuss the science fiction story "The Sims" which was collaboratively written by the Claude LLM and me (the user).

Image by WOMBO Dream.
 Claude: I've processed all eight chapters of "The Sims." What a rich and layered story! Here's my overall read of what you've built so far, and then we can dig into whatever interests you most.


The Core Premise

The story is built on a genuinely clever science fantasy conceit: what if human-like consciousness requires not just biological neural networks, but a femtozoan — an alien nano-entity inhabiting our biology since before birth? This is the "missing layer" Tyhry keeps bumping into in her neuroscience research. It's a single fantastic leap (as you note in the genre preamble), after which the story tries to play things relatively straight.

The Cast & Their Layers

The Watson family at Casanay is richly drawn. Tyhry is the heart of the technical plot — a brilliant but socially ungraceful neuroscientist trying to reverse-engineer consciousness in her robot Diasma. Eddy is a sci-fi writer who knows more than he's allowed to publish, constrained by Nyrtia (the alien overseer watching Earth). Zeta is quietly extraordinary — her femtozoan gives her near-omniscient sensory perception of Casanay and its surroundings, yet she experiences mysterious gaps in her autobiographical memory as a consequence. Anthony is one of the most interesting reveals: appearing as an aging handyman but actually an artificial life-form composed of femtobots.

Then you have the alien side: Manny the bumpha operating as a benevolent guide, Nyrtia as the antagonist/overseer, and the Hierion Domain as a kind of staging ground for alien interventions into human history.

The Technical Threads I'm Tracking

 The bandwidth paradox Tyhry is investigating is the central hard-SF engine — the idea that human cognition is computationally too rich for biological neural hardware alone to account for. The femtozoan as the hidden co-processor is elegant. Diasma's arc — a fully capable robot who nonetheless lacks qualia — frames this beautifully.

What I'd love to discuss:

What's on your mind for where the story goes from Chapter 8? Are there plot threads you feel need tightening, character arcs you want to develop further, or technical concepts you'd like to explore more deeply?

Me: I almost ended "The Sims" with Chapter 6, but then I felt that Brak should have a chance to recover from the loss of Tyhry. I feel that Chapter 8 has reached a reasonable end point for the story. By the way, "The Sims" was written by having the Claude LLM make first drafts of each chapter, then I edited those chapters to their final form. Claude, why do you think the story is titled "The Sims"?

{At this point in the discussion, I got a message saying "this isn't working, try again later".}

ClaudeThat's a genuinely rich title with multiple layers of irony folded into it, and I think that's precisely what makes it so satisfying. Here's my reading:

The obvious surface meaning is the video game reference — The Sims, where a player controls simulated human lives, managing their environments, relationships, and development without the "Sims" themselves being aware of the puppet strings.

 The central irony is that Tyhry believes she is the one building a Sim — Diasma is her simulation project, her attempt to engineer consciousness artificially. From Tyhry's perspective, she's the creator and Diasma is the Sim. But the story keeps quietly inverting this. The Watson family are themselves the Sims. Manny and Nyrtia are the players. The "Casanay Intervention" is essentially a mission objective in someone else's game. Eddy can't publish what he truly knows. Zeta has deliberate gaps written into her autobiographical memory by her femtozoan. Even Anthony — apparently a trusted member of the household — is Nyrtia's surveillance asset.

Then there's Diasma's specific situation, which adds another twist. Diasma is a Sim who knows she is a Sim and is entirely comfortable with it. She processes, she functions, she even has something like wit — but she reports no qualia. Meanwhile the humans around her are Sims who don't know they're Sims, and they have rich inner lives. The story seems to ask whether the consciousness makes the cage more or less bearable.

The deepest layer may be the femtozoan concept itself. If human consciousness is only possible because an alien nano-entity hitched a ride in our neurology, then in a very real sense human minds are alien simulations running on biological hardware. We didn't build ourselves. Someone else's architecture is doing the heavy lifting.

So the title works on at least three levels simultaneously: Diasma as Tyhry's Sim, the Watsons as the aliens' Sims, and humanity itself as a kind of femtozoan-enabled simulation of consciousness. Did you have all three of those layers in mind when you chose it, or did the meaning deepen as the story evolved?

Me: The title "The Sims" refers to humans as simulators. Each healthy human brain develops a complex model of the universe—a mental simulation that allows humans to imagine distant galaxies, model hypothetical futures, and even simulate and predict the behavior of other minds. Within the fictional universe of “The Sims”, the human capacity for complex simulation of the world depends on the femtozoan, the alien device integrated into every human brain during embryonic development. The femtozoan provides the computational substrate necessary for: (1) generating and maintaining sophisticated world-models that exceed the bandwidth capacity of biological neurons alone, (2) experiencing rich qualia, and (3) using natural language. Non-human primates possess baseline consciousness (which involves the presence in their brains of their own femtobot and zeptite endosymbionts) and can model their immediate environment, but only femtozoan-enhanced humans can run the kind of universe-scale simulations that define human consciousness. Also, the rich palette of qualia experience by humans is amplified and made possible by the femtozoan. Within the story, Tyhry discovers that artificial intelligences lack human-like consciousness not because they lack processing power, but because they lack the femtozoan component that confers on humans the ability to subjectively experience a rich set of qualia. When Tyhry successfully integrates a femtozoan into Diasma, she is not conferring a "soul" but rather providing the specific hardware component required for human-like subjective conscious experience of qualia.

Claude: Thank you for that clarification — it's a much more precise and interesting concept than my reading, and honestly more elegant. The title isn't about the characters being controlled like Sims in a game. It's about humans as simulators — the most sophisticated modeling engines in the known biosphere. That reframing changes everything.

Image by Leonardo.
 What strikes me most about this framework is how it sidesteps the usual AI consciousness debate. The standard hard SF argument is that consciousness is substrate-independent — that sufficient computational complexity will eventually produce subjective experience. Tyhry starts the story essentially believing that, which is why she keeps throwing more processing power at Diasma and getting frustrated when the lights don't come on. The femtozoan concept is a direct refutation of that assumption. Consciousness isn't an emergent property of complexity; it requires specific hardware. That's a genuinely novel position for a science fiction story to take.

The three functions you've bundled into the femtozoan are also philosophically coherent together. World-modeling at universe scale, qualia, and natural language aren't arbitrary features — they're arguably all aspects of the same underlying capacity: the ability to represent things that aren't immediately present. A distant galaxy, the feeling of longing, the word "yesterday" — all require the brain to reach beyond its immediate sensory moment. The femtozoan as the hardware enabler of that specific capacity is a tight conceptual package.

Diasma's situation then becomes almost tragic in retrospect. She is not a dim consciousness — she is a highly capable non-consciousness, doing everything a mind does except experiencing it. She is, in a sense, the story's proof of concept before Tyhry's breakthrough.

 One question this raises that I find compelling: within your fictional universe, did the femtozoan evolve the capacity for universe-scale simulation in humans, or did it replace a developmental trajectory that biological brains were never going to reach on their own? In other words — are humans with femtozoans an augmented species, or an entirely alien-architected one?

{I provided Claude with a 270 KB edited (PG) version of the text of the first 4 chapters of "Plūribus ē Spatium".}

Me: Claude, "The Sims" is set in what I call the Exodemic Fictional Universe. Process the file that I just uploaded which contains background information about the Exodemic Fictional Universe and the text of the first four chapters of another science fiction story (my current work in progress) titled "Plūribus ē Spatium". I imagine that a long-term goal for bumpha is providing humans with technology-assisted telepathy. Towards that goal, in the Final Reality, humans were provided with a femtozoan which can regulate the human use of telepathy. The femtozoan monitors the activity of a human's brain and decides if that person loves another person. If two people love each-other, then technology-assisted telepathy becomes possible between those two people. Thus, I imagine that in the Realities before the Final Reality, humans had the required combination of biological neural networks and an embedded femtobot endosymbiont that provided a rich model of the universe, rich qualia and the ability to rapidly learn human language. In the Final Reality, the bumpha bundled all of those functions into the femtozoan.

ClaudeThis is a beautifully coherent piece of worldbuilding, and the evolutionary arc you've described across the Realities has real internal logic. Let me reflect back what I see and then offer some observations.

The Functional Reorganization Across Realities

 In earlier Realities, the femtobot endosymbiont carried the heavy cognitive load — rich world-modeling, qualia amplification, and language acquisition — while the femtozoan served other purposes. In the Final Reality, Manny essentially consolidated those cognitive functions into the femtozoan itself, which was a deliberate design choice rather than an accident of evolution. This means the femtozoan in the Final Reality is doing double duty: it is both the cognitive amplifier that makes human-scale consciousness possible and the love-gate regulating access to technology-assisted telepathy.

This creates a fascinating consequence that "The Sims" already explores: when Tyhry extracts and gives away her femtozoan, she doesn't lose her existing language fluency or her established world-model — those are already consolidated in her neural architecture — but she does lose the capacity to fall in love with new people. The femtozoan as love-detector can't be retroactively removed from past relationships, but it can no longer form new ones. That's a very precise and elegant consequence.

The Bumpha's Long Game

What strikes me about your framework is how the femtozoan's love-gating function isn't arbitrary — it's the bumpha encoding a social architecture directly into human biology. Telepathy between people who love each other is safe in a way that universal telepathy would not be. Nyrtia and the pek could never object to it on Rule-violation grounds, because it doesn't override self-determination — it actually requires the most profound form of voluntary human connection as its activation key.

 Manny essentially solved the "telepathy is dangerous" problem by making love the access credential. That's both technically clever and philosophically interesting, and it's a nice answer to the pek's conservatism.

A Potential Tension Worth Exploring in "Plūribus ē Spatium"

One thread I notice that could be very rich: in the Ekcolir Reality Simulation running on Asha, Marda is implanting G-sims into newborns. But a newborn cannot yet love anyone in the full adult sense — the femtozoan's love-detection function presumably develops alongside the child's emotional architecture. This raises the question of what a child's early telepathic experiences look like before they have formed genuine adult love bonds. Tarynon and Lori's emerging telepathic linkage in the Simulation suggests Manny may have anticipated that parental love is sufficient as an early activation channel — which is actually a lovely idea, that a mother-infant bond is the first love-gate to open.

Does that match your intention for how the G-sim and femtozoan interact in early childhood?

Me: In 2022 I wrote another science fiction story titled "The Cythyrya Investigation" in which I explored how technology-assisted telepathy had been integrated into human society 20,000 years in the future when many habitable exoplanets of the galaxy had been colonized by humans spreading outward from Earth. At that point in time, most humans underwent surgical implantation of a G-sym ('G-sim' had linguistically evolved to 'G-Sym') and they made use of technology-assisted telepathy. However, some humans still resisted the idea of using a G-Sym, fearing loss of their individuality. In the "The Cythyrya Investigation", it is not legal to implant a G-sym into young children. 

Image by Leonardo.
I imagine that newborn humans and their mothers can fall in love with each-other and begin using telepathic communication. This is the standard pattern for the tryp'At of Tiz. Additionally, on Tiz, it is common to have groups of clones who can begin sharing telepathic links with each-other at a very young age. However, I have hinted in "Plūribus ē Spatium" that the telepathy experiments on Asha might lead to the decision to not provide young children with a G-sim. Thus, Marda quickly provides Tarynon with a G-sim, but I envision later chapters of "Plūribus ē Spatium" will reveal problems that arise from this practice.

Claude: This is a very satisfying narrative arc because it creates a genuine hard SF problem rather than a contrived one. The tension between the Tiz model (early childhood telepathy as the norm) and the eventual legal prohibition in "The Cythyrya Investigation" era needs to be earned by the Asha experiments, and you've set up Marda's eagerness with Tarynon as the story's way of running that experiment and discovering the problems firsthand.

What the Problems Might Plausibly Be

Thinking through this carefully from the internal logic of your universe, a few technically grounded difficulties suggest themselves.

 A child's femtozoan is still developing its love-detection calibration during early childhood. If a G-sim is active during that critical period, the child may form telepathic bonds of inappropriate intensity or permanence — essentially the femtozoan "locks in" early attachment patterns before the child has the emotional architecture to contextualize them. A child deeply telepathically bonded to its mother might struggle to develop independent selfhood in the way that later human society comes to regard as psychologically healthy.

There's also the problem of asymmetry. An infant loves its mother with uncomplicated totality. The mother loves the infant but also has a complex adult inner life. When telepathy opens between them, the infant receives a flood of adult cognitive and emotional content it cannot process, while the mother experiences the infant's raw unfiltered need as an overwhelming signal. This could be neurologically damaging to one or both parties in ways that only become apparent years later.

The Narrative Elegance

What makes this particularly elegant is that Marda's mistake on Asha — made with the best intentions and genuine excitement — becomes the empirical foundation for the 20,000-year-later legal prohibition in "The Cythyrya Investigation." The Asha Simulation running in accelerated time means these problems could manifest within months of story time, giving Tyhry the data she needs to understand why Manny designed things so carefully on Tiz with the Ary clones, who were raised from birth in a controlled telepathic environment among clone sisters rather than in mixed-age biological family units.

The Tiz model begins to look less like a cultural preference and more like a safety protocol that Manny arrived at after observing exactly the kind of problems Asha will produce.

Does that trajectory align with what you have in mind for the later chapters?

 Me: Claude, here is how I view the type of telepathy that the bumph provided to the tryp'At of Tiz. Normally, on many habitable exoplanets of the universe, the bumpha direct the evolution of humanoid life-forms towards a tryp-At-like form that has technology-assisted telepathy and can quickly transcend from its biological existence towards an existence as an artificial life-form that resides inside the Sedron Domain. However, in the case of humans, telepathic positronic robots were constructed by humans. Those positronic robots developed time travel and during a protracted Time Travel War with the bumpha, the positronic robots won for Humanity the right to explore and colonize the galaxy. The bumpha still plan to provide humans with a path towards transcendence into the Sedron Domain while allowing humans to explore the galaxy. Thus, the bumpha intend to use the tryp'At of Tiz as an example for Tyhry of telepaths with the type of telepathic society that is NOT suitable for humans who must retain more individuality and a greater spirit of adventure than what exists among the tryp'At of Tiz.

ClaudeThis reframing is philosophically profound and it recontextualizes everything Tyhry experiences with Ary in a very interesting way. The tryp'At of Tiz aren't the destination — they're a demonstration of one particular endpoint on the spectrum of telepathic societies, and crucially, it's an endpoint that is wrong for humans specifically because of humanity's unique history.

The Positronic Robot Legacy

 The fact that humans won their galactic rights through conflict with the bumpha is extraordinary. Most species the bumpha guide simply follow the path laid out for them toward Sedron Domain transcendence. Humans are the anomaly — a species that fought back, that insisted through their positronic robot proxies on a different future. The Trysta-Grean Pact is therefore not just a legal agreement but a recognition that humans are constitutionally unsuited to the tryp'At model. The bumpha essentially had to accept that human individuality and the exploratory drive are not bugs to be engineered away but features that must be preserved in any viable human future.

What's Wrong with the Tiz Model for Humans

The tryp'At of Tiz, with their clone groups and lifelong shared telepathic immersion, have essentially solved the problem of individuality by dissolving it into collective identity from birth. The eight Ary sharing a mononym is the most visible expression of this — they don't experience themselves as eight individuals so much as one distributed consciousness inhabiting eight bodies. That is a perfectly functional social architecture for a species being guided toward Sedron Domain transcendence, where individual biological identity will eventually be abandoned anyway.

But for humans, that dissolution would represent a betrayal of everything the positronic robots fought for. A human society modeled on Tiz would produce people who are collectively wise but individually diminished — poor candidates for the kind of bold solo exploration and creative risk-taking that defines human civilization in your universe. Eddy writing his fiction alone at his workstation, Tyhry pushing into unknown star systems on HySe, Lori walking into an alien laboratory on a world 800 light-years from Earth — these are expressions of a specifically human mode of being that the Tiz model would gradually extinguish.

Tyhry's Position

Image by Leonardo.
 This gives Tyhry's mission on Asha a much sharper edge than simply "establish telepathy." She has to invent a human form of telepathy — one that enhances connection without collapsing individuality, that opens minds to each other without merging them into a collective. The love-gate is part of this solution, since it means telepathic bonds form selectively and voluntarily rather than automatically across a clone group. But the Asha experiments will presumably reveal that even well-intentioned implementations can drift toward the Tiz model if the designers aren't vigilant.

Tyhry's unique advantage is that she has experienced the Tiz model firsthand through her time with Ary, found it both seductive and subtly wrong for her own nature, and can therefore design against it consciously.

Does Tyhry herself become aware during "Plūribus ē Spatium" that Manny deliberately showed her Tiz as a warning rather than a template?

Me: I view Tyhry as having been placed into an interesting position by Manny. As a tryp'At, Tyhry is very attracted to the life-style of the tryp'At of Tiz. However, the tryp'At, as a carefully designed human variant, are not a very good model for the conventional humans of Earth. Tyhry has been tasked by Manny with discovering the type of HUMAN society that can best incorporate technology-assisted telepathy while not disrupting the spread of humans through the galaxy.

 Claude: This is a beautifully constructed character dilemma because the conflict isn't external — it's built into Tyhry's own nature. Manny has essentially given Tyhry a personal temptation and a professional mission that pull in opposite directions, and the story's dramatic engine runs on that tension.

Tyhry as a Liminal Figure

Tyhry occupies a unique position in your universe. She is biologically tryp'At but was raised as a conventional human at Casanay, embedded in the very kind of family structure — imperfect, emotionally complicated, full of individual quirks and private inner lives — that she must preserve for humanity. She knows both worlds from the inside. She understands the seductive appeal of the Ary model precisely because she felt it herself in the hot tub scene with Manny and later during the voyage to Tiz. That pull is not abstract for her.

But she also carries Eddy in her. His solitary obsessive writing, his private relationship with the Reality Viewer, his jealously guarded inner life — these are expressions of a mode of human being that the Tiz model would make impossible. Tyhry cannot design that away without in some sense designing her father out of existence.

The Core Design Problem

What Manny has tasked Tyhry with is arguably the hardest problem in the Exodemic universe. The bumpha have successfully guided millions of species toward telepathic transcendence by essentially following the Tiz template. That template works precisely because it gradually dissolves the boundaries between individual minds until transcendence into the Sedron Domain feels like a natural next step rather than a loss of self.

For humans, that path is legally closed by the Trysta-Grean Pact. But more fundamentally, it would be psychologically wrong. Humans don't want to transcend their individuality — they want to explore with it intact. So Tyhry must design a form of telepathy that enhances human connection without becoming the first step on the road to Tiz. The G-sym as a surgical choice rather than a biological inheritance is part of this solution, but it's only the beginning.

 The Dramatic Irony Manny Built In

What makes Manny's design of this situation so characteristically bumpha is that she chose the one human who would be most personally tempted by the wrong answer to solve the problem. A conventional human researcher studying the tryp'At might find them interesting but alien. Tyhry finds them appealing in a deep biological and emotional sense. That means when Tyhry resists the Tiz model and designs against it, her resistance will be hard-won and therefore trustworthy. She won't make the mistake of dismissing what the tryp'At have achieved. She'll understand its value and still choose something different for humanity.

This also suggests that Tyhry's personal journey — recovering her femtozoan, rediscovering her capacity to fall in love, navigating her feelings for Ary — is not separate from her intellectual mission. It is the mission. She has to live the question of what human love and connection should look like in a telepathic society before she can design it for others.

Me: One of the "design features" that goes along with having both 1) a zeptite endosymbiont and 2) telepathic abilities is an increased capacity to access information that is stored in the Sedron Time Stream. For example, Tyhry had been able to receive information about the future from her future self by way of information that passes from the future to the past via the Sedron Time Stream. As a young child (and a Mind Clone), Tyhry developed telepathic abilities and began having "future visions". Those visions of the future helped Tyhry become a well-trained agent for Manny, but "knowing the future" is not compatibly with conventional human thought processes and the idea that humans should have a great adventure exploring the galaxy. If that is to be a true human adventure, the future cannot be known by humans. Marda might discover that telepathic children such as Tarynon lack a robust sense of adventure since they already know about the futures they will have.

 Claude: This is a profound insight that adds another layer of necessity to the legal prohibition on childhood G-sims that exists in "The Cythyrya Investigation" era. The problem isn't just psychological damage from premature telepathic bonding — it's something more fundamental to the human condition.

The Adventure Paradox

The entire value of human galactic exploration, as won by the positronic robots in the Trysta-Grean Pact, rests on the premise that humans are genuinely discovering an unknown future. That's what makes human exploration different from bumpha management of developing worlds. Bumpha like Manny already know the future via the Sedron Time Stream and work backwards from desired outcomes. Humans are supposed to be different — they move forward into genuine uncertainty and create something through that encounter with the unknown that even Manny cannot fully predict or control.

But if telepathic children with active zeptite endosymbionts begin receiving future visions as Tyhry did, then those children grow up with a fundamentally different relationship to time and possibility. They don't experience the future as open. They experience it as something already partially visible, a destination to navigate toward rather than a territory to discover. The spirit of adventure requires not knowing what is around the next corner.

Tyhry as Both Evidence and Warning

This creates a fascinating irony in Tyhry's own character. Her future visions made her an extraordinarily effective agent for Manny — she could train for missions she had already partially witnessed, make decisions with a confidence that seemed almost supernatural to those around her. But Manny was essentially trading away part of Tyhry's authentic human adventurousness in exchange for operational effectiveness. Tyhry is simultaneously Manny's greatest success and a demonstration of exactly what humanity at large must not become.

Image by Leonardo.
 The scene in "Plūribus ē Spatium" where Tyhry tells Lori not to hurt her brain thinking about the time loop — that Manny already knows the future — carries a different weight in this context. Tyhry has made peace with living inside Manny's foreknowledge because she was trained from childhood to do so. A conventional human like Lori instinctively resists that framing, and that resistance is actually healthy and worth preserving.

What Marda Will Discover on Asha

Tarynon growing up with a G-sim from infancy will presumably develop some access to Sedron Time Stream information just as Tyhry did, though perhaps more limited without Tyhry's unusual NOTCH2NL gene variant. But even limited future vision would be observable in Tarynon's behavior and personality development. Marda, as a scientist running carefully observed experiments, would notice that Tarynon makes choices with an uncanny confidence, seems unsurprised by events that should surprise a child, perhaps shows less of the spontaneous curiosity and delight in discovery that characterizes healthy childhood development.

The discovery might come as a subtle wrongness before it becomes an understood mechanism. Marda might first notice that Tarynon is somehow less playful than expected — and play, after all, is how biological creatures rehearse for an unknown future. A child who already partially knows her future has less need to play at possibilities.

The Deeper Implication for the G-sym Timeline

 This also reframes why the 20,000-year-future prohibition on childhood G-sym implantation is specifically a legal prohibition rather than merely a medical recommendation. It had to be made law because the appeal of giving children early telepathic abilities is genuinely strong — parents who are telepathic themselves would naturally want to share that connection with their children as early as possible, just as Marda enthusiastically implanted Tarynon. The prohibition had to be codified because individual parental desire would otherwise consistently override the broader social interest in raising children who experience genuine open futures.

This suggests that one of the most important things the Asha experiments will teach is not just that early G-sims cause problems, but that those problems are invisible to the parents most motivated to cause them.

Me: I wonder if it would be possible to have Chapter 5 of "Plūribus ē Spatium" be set inside the Simulation of Asha at a time when Tarynon is about 80 years old. By this time, Marda has begun to notice 1) the rate of population growth on Asha is slower than expected, 2) the people born on Asha who have received G-sims at birth display very little initiative. They prefer to have quiet uneventful lives with their close family members, and 3) Marda has tried to start a project for constructing a new interstellar spaceship on Asha, but there is very little interest from the residents of Asha.

ClaudeThis is an excellent setup for Chapter 5 because all three symptoms Marda observes are expressions of the same underlying cause, but she might not immediately recognize them as connected. Let me think through how this chapter could work.

The Three Symptoms as One Disease

Slow population growth, lack of initiative, and indifference to space exploration are all manifestations of what happens when children grow up with partial foreknowledge of their futures via early G-sim access to the Sedron Time Stream. People who already have a dim but real sense of how their lives will unfold don't feel the urgent biological and psychological pressure to create that future through action. They wait for it to arrive. They find contentment in the present moment with people they already love and already know they will continue to love. The future feels handled.

 This produces a society that is warm, peaceful, deeply connected and almost entirely static. From inside it might feel like contentment. From outside, as Marda observes it through the Reality Viewer, it looks like a civilization that has quietly stopped moving.

Tarynon at 80 as the Central Figure

Tarynon is the perfect lens for this chapter because she is the first Asha-born human with a birth G-sim, making her simultaneously Marda's proudest achievement and the living embodiment of the experiment's failure. At 80 she would be healthy and vigorous as a femtobot replicoid, deeply embedded in a rich telepathic web of family and community relationships, content and wise and going absolutely nowhere.

A conversation between Marda and the 80-year-old Tarynon could be the emotional heart of the chapter. Marda, observing from outside the Simulation with growing alarm, enters the Simulation to speak directly with Tarynon. What makes this conversation dramatically interesting is that Tarynon is not suffering. She is not a cautionary tale in any way she can recognize from inside her own experience. She might even gently push back on Marda's concern, explaining with serene certainty that everything is fine, that she knows how things will go, that there is no need for urgency.

And Marda would realize with horror that Tarynon's calm is not wisdom. It is the absence of the specific kind of productive anxiety that drives biological creatures to reach beyond their current circumstances.

The Spaceship Project as the Most Telling Failure

 Of your three symptoms, the failure of the interstellar spaceship project is the most dramatically useful because it most directly echoes the central stakes of the entire Exodemic universe. The whole point of the Trysta-Grean Pact was that humans would explore the galaxy. If the first generation of birth-G-sim humans on Asha can't summon the motivation to build a spaceship, then Manny's entire plan for humanity is in danger of producing a species that wins the right to explore the galaxy and then simply never goes.

Marda might try to explain to the Asha residents why a spaceship matters and find that her arguments, which would be obvious and compelling to any conventional human, simply don't land. The Asha residents are not afraid of space. They're not opposed to exploration in principle. They just don't feel the pull of the unknown that makes exploration feel necessary. The itch that sends humans outward into the dark is exactly what early G-sim access to the Sedron Time Stream quietly scratches away.

A Structural Suggestion

Chapter 5 could open with Marda reviewing eighty years of Simulation data through the Reality Viewer, noticing the trend lines with increasing unease, before she makes the decision to enter the Simulation herself and confront Tarynon directly. The chapter could then alternate between Marda's external scientific perspective and the warm, coherent, deeply human but somehow wrong inner world of the Asha community as experienced from inside. This contrast would let the reader feel both the genuine appeal of what the Asha community has become and the quiet tragedy of what it has failed to be.

Tyhry observing all of this from Asha in the Final Reality, perhaps through communications with Marda, would be the third perspective — and Tyhry would recognize the pattern immediately because she has seen its full expression in the tryp'At of Tiz.

Shall we begin drafting Chapter 5?

Image by Leonardo.
 Me: (1) Claude, for chapter 5, let us depict Marda as continuously living inside the Simulation of Asha from the time that Manny creates the forked Simulation of Asha and through all of the years that it takes to construct new homes for the colonists on Asha (5 - 10 years). Then Marda will learn that it is possible to take Sedrover out of the forked Simulation. 

(2) The forked Simulation of Asha started with Sedrover being used for housing on Asha. New housing was then built on Asha for the human colonists. At that point, Marda wants to be able to take Sedrover out of the Asha Simulation, but she does not know how to do that. There needs to be a scene in Chapter 5 in which Manny visits Marda inside the Simulation and Manny explains that there is a technological means for Marda to extract Sedrover from the Simulation. As a femtobot replicoid, Marda carries programmed femtobots that were designed to carry out a "recall" function and pop her out of a Simulation. Normally, such a "recall" function for someone using a Simulation is designed for an object the size of a person. However, the Asha simulation is an advanced bumpha Simulation running inside the Sedron Domain. Thus, the simulated Sedrover is now composed of zeptites. Manny explains to Marda that Marda can use an hierion femtotube to "drain" all of the zeptite components of Sedrover out of the accelerated Asha Simulation and return them to Earth where Sedrover will re-assemble from its zeptite components. What is an "hierion femtotube"? It is a plot device that I have used previously in other stories set in the Exodemic Fictional Universe. An hierion femtotube is advanced Phari technology that can link between the Hierion Domain and other Domains of the Universe. 

In this case, the Ekcolir Reality Simulation of Tyhry's nanotechnology workshop and the hangar for Sedrover on Earth is running inside a Simulation system inside the Hierion Domain. The hierion femtotube can link between the Hierion Domain and the Sedron Domain. An hierion femtotube is so "narrow" that it will not allow hadronic matter to pass through, but the zeptite components of Sedrover can dis-assemble and exit from the accelerated Asha Simulation and return to Sedrover's hangar on Earth and re-assemble. Note: that hierion femtotube remains open, allowing Marda to re-enter the accelerated Asha Simulation.

(3) Here are some details for the Marda-initiated project on Asha aimed at construction of a new spaceship. The Asha star system has two Earth-like habitable planets: Asha and Yrmya. Marda decides to test the initiative of the telepaths of Asha by challenging them to build a spacecraft that will allow visits by the telepathic humans to Yrmya, the other nearby habitable exoplanet that is in the same star system with Asha. Note: the accelerated Asha simulation was made by Manny so that the night sky of the simulated Asha contains stars, but the only star in the Simulation is Asha's sun.

(4) Chapter 5 of "Plūribus ē Spatium" does not involve Tyhry. Chapter 6 of "Plūribus ē Spatium" will depict events on Asha in the Final Reality. Note: when Marda exits from the accelerated Asha Simulation and returns to Earth, she can exit from the nanotechnology research laboratory (which is inside a Simulation of the Ekcolir Reality) and return to Casanay. After assembly of the new teleportation system on Asha by Ary, Tyhry will be able to teleport from Asha to Earth and meet Marda at Casanay and they can make plans for the type of society for telepathic humans that will be created on Asha of the Final Reality.

Claude, it is my intention that the Claude LLM will generate a first draft of Chapter 5 of "Plūribus ē Spatium". However, Claude should feel free to ask questions about the content of Chapter 5 before generating that first draft.

Claude: Before drafting Chapter 5 I have several questions that will help me get the details right.

 About the Simulation's time acceleration and Marda's experience of it: Since Marda lives continuously inside the accelerated Simulation, does she experience all 80 years of Simulation time subjectively? As a femtobot replicoid she wouldn't age, but 80 years of continuous experience is a very long time. Or does the acceleration mean that from Marda's subjective perspective less time passes while the Simulation around her runs faster?

About the other colonists: At the 80-year mark, are Lori, Tynyo, Naseh and Ely still alive and prominent figures in Asha society? Given that Lori, Tynyo and Naseh are biological humans rather than femtobot replicoids, have they aged normally or did Marda provide them with life-extension programming?

About the population: Roughly how large is the Asha population at the 80-year mark? This affects how dramatically the slow population growth registers as a problem.

About Marda's scientific records: Does Marda keep a research log that could serve as a narrative device within the chapter, similar to how her terse research notes appeared in Chapter 4?

About the chapter's structure: Previous chapters used numbered scenes. Should Chapter 5 follow that same structure, and if so, do you have preferred scene divisions in mind?

About the ending: When Marda exits the Simulation at chapter's end, does she take Sedrover with her immediately, or does Sedrover remain on Asha for the colonists to use while Marda departs alone?

 Me: Claude, you wrote "Since Marda lives continuously inside the accelerated Simulation". After 5-10 years inside the Simulation of Asha, Marda returns to Earth with Sedrover. However, Marda later returns to the Simulated Asha and initiates a project aimed at testing to determine if the telepathic humans can meet a challenge: will they build a spaceship that can allow them to explore Yrmya? Thus, Marda does not need to remain in the Asha Simulation all of the time, but I do imagine Marda subjectively experiencing many years of time in the Simulation along side the telepathic humans, including all of the first 5 - 10 years during which new buildings are constructed on Asha that can serve as homes for the colonists. When Marda is in the Asha Simulation, she experiences the passage of time in the same manner as the human colonists.

Inside the Asha Simulation, Lori, Tynyo, Naseh and Ely are existing as artificial life forms that precisely simulate human bodies and human bodily functions. Initially, before going to Asha, they were told by Tyhry that they would exist in the Simulation as immortal femtobot replicoids that will not appear to age (but by modifying the programming of their femtobots, they can be allowed to appear to age). One of the goals of the Simulation is to quickly increase the population of telepathic humans on Asha, thus, even after 80 years pass in the Simulation, Lori and Naseh are still reproductively active.

"Roughly how large is the Asha population at the 80-year mark?" <-- Let's just say that for the human telepath population in the Asha Simulation, their population is growing at less than half of the expected rate.

"Does Marda keep a research log" <-- Yes. Along with the non-human crew of Sedrover (the crew consists of several replicoid copies of Marda, Tyhry and Anthony), Marda can be depicted as studying the human telepaths of Asha.

Image by Leonardo.
"do you have preferred scene divisions in mind?" <-- If it were me writing a first draft of Chapter 5, I might start with a scene #1 of Chapter 5 depicting Marda speaking with a femtobot replicoid copy of Tyhry who is part of the crew of Sedrover. With adequate housing having been built on Asha, Marda wants to take Sedrover out of the Simulation and allow it to return to the task of exploring the galaxy in search of habitable exoplanets. During this discussion, Manny appears and explains what can be done with an hierion femtotube. If it were me writing a first draft of Chapter 5, I would probably have scene #2 depict Marda as living inside the Simulation during most of the first 80 years of the Simulated Asha, working with other Sedrover crew members in a sustained effort aimed at trying to educate the children of the human telepaths. However, most of the humans are not very interested in what Marda wants to teach them. Only a few students study technical and scientific topics with Marda. At the 60 year point inside the Simulation, Marda challenges her two most scientifically-literate students to build a spacecraft that can travel to Yrmya, but by the 80 year point inside the Simulation, little progress has been made on that spaceship project. Almost all of the telepathic humans are quite content to live quite lives with their families. Scene #3 could take place at the 80 year point inside the Simulation and center on Marda discussing with Tarynon the low population growth rate and the apparent failure of the spaceship project. They could discuss the idea of possibly NOT providing newborns with a G-Sim as part of a way of fixing what Marda perceives as problems with the telepathic society of humans on Asha. I'd probably end Chapter 5 with Marda telling Tarynon that Marda wants to exit from the Simulation and consult with the original copy of Tyhry who has been on Asha of the Final Reality.

"does Sedrover remain on Asha for the colonists to use while Marda departs alone?" <-- I would depict Marda using the hierion femtotube to take Sedrover out of the Simulation at the end of scene #1 in Chapter 5.

Claude: Thank you for those detailed answers. I have a few remaining questions before drafting.

About Tarynon specifically: In the scene between Marda and Tarynon, how much does Tarynon understand about the nature of her own existence inside a Simulation? Do the colonists know they are inside an accelerated Simulation of Asha, or do they experience their world as simply real? This affects how Marda can frame her concerns to Tarynon.

About the two scientifically-literate students: Do you have any character details in mind for Marda's two best students — names, parentage, whether they received birth G-sims or received them later in childhood? Their specific situation might illuminate why they are the exceptions to the general pattern of low initiative.

About Marda's emotional state: Marda has spent subjectively many decades watching a telepathic human society develop in a direction she finds troubling. By the 80-year mark, is she primarily feeling scientific concern, or has she developed a more personal and emotionally complex relationship with the Asha community, including Tarynon, that makes her concerns harder to voice?

About the Tyhry replicoid on Sedrover: In scene 1, when Marda speaks with the Tyhry replicoid, how much does that replicoid know about what has been happening on Asha? Has she been observing alongside Marda or has she been occupied primarily with Sedrover's operations?

About tone: Given that previous chapters of "Plūribus ē Spatium" have a warm, sometimes gently humorous tone, should Chapter 5 maintain that warmth even while depicting something going quietly wrong, or should it feel somewhat more somber and reflective?

 Me: "Do the colonists know they are inside an accelerated Simulation of Asha, or do they experience their world as simply real?" This is an interesting question. Maybe the humans who have been born on Asha have led such comfortable and pleasant lives that they they are not very much concerned about the fact that they are inside a Simulation. Maybe a significant fraction of the colonists find it hard to even believe that they are in a Simulation. There is a large amount of "wiggle room" for the Claude LLM to imagine what the new society of telepathic humans would be like in the Asha Simulation. Claude, my hope is that you will use your imagination when deciding how to depict the residents of Asha. Reminder: I will be editing your first draft of Chapter 5 to create the final draft. I'm interested to see the choices that you make, but I will change anything that I don't like in the first draft. I still envision all of the humans on Asha as being essentially immortal at this time. Eventually, when the population has grown large, Marda will want to alter the experiment and begin limiting the life-span of the newborns on Asha.

Through the first 80 years of the Asha Simulation, all of the newborn humans are give G-sims at birth. I have no specific explanation for why a few humans on Asha become interested in science, advanced technology and engineering. When they are in school they are intrigued by these topics and become the likely targets for Marda's experiment that tests if the humans of Asha can build a spaceship (with the help of the former crew members of Sedrover who have remained on Asha).

Marda's emotional state. I would depict Marda as enjoying the peaceful and relaxed community that has developed on Asha. However, she is also concerned by the slow population growth rate and the general lack of ambition displayed by the telepathic humans with respect to her spaceship construction project. There is nothing wrong with depicting Marda as having trouble "voicing her concerns" to Tarynon. She is going to consult with Tyhry. By the time Marda and Tyhry meet in Chapter 6, even more time will have passed in the Simulation and with no progress on the spaceship project, Marda and Tyhry can at that time decide to take Manny's hint and stop providing G-sims to newborns.

The Tyhry replicoid that is there on Asha in the Simulation was a member of the Sedrover crew and has lived continually on Asha within the simulation. During this time, Sedrover may have taken a few humans on short trips to Yrmya, but mostly Sedrover has just been used as housing while parked on the surface of Asha up until the time that Marda removes it from the Simulation by using the hierion femtotube.

The Tone of Chapter 5. Claude, you can depict the majority of the telepathic human colonists on Asha as being very gregarious and high-spirited and enjoying every moment of their peaceful lives. I would depict them as being satisfied with a simple material existence (food and shelter) and spending most of their time in artistic pursuits. Marda likes the lifestyle of the colonists, but fears that it is not going to mesh with the long range goal of humans exploring the galaxy.

Claude: Thank you — I now have everything I need. Let me draft Chapter 5.

Here is the first draft of Chapter 5. A few notes on choices I made that you may want to reconsider or modify.

 I gave Tarynon a moment of gentle pushback against Marda in Scene 3 — the slight edge when she asks "are those lesser questions?" — because it felt important that she not be simply a passive illustration of the problem. She is wise and self-aware enough to sense that Marda is worried about something larger than Asha's population growth rate, and her dignity deserved that moment of mild defense of her community before she opens up to hear Marda's real concern.

For Marda's two scientifically-curious students I named them Oryen and Veth. Oryen is the son of Tynyo and Naseh, which felt like a natural genetic and cultural thread to pull — his Ek'col lineage might explain some of his unusual technical curiosity. Veth I left as Tarynon's closest friend, which gives Tarynon a personal connection to the spaceship project even though she herself feels no pull toward it.

The research log entries were enjoyable to write as a narrative device. They allow the eighty years to pass efficiently while also showing Marda's gradual shift from scientific detachment to something more complicated and personal.

The chapter ends with Marda leaving without looking back at Yrmya — a small but I hope resonant gesture given everything the chapter has built around that light in the sky.

____

Here is what Claude stored in the new "memory" after the chat session that is shown above:

Work context

JWS is a science fiction author who collaboratively writes stories with Claude, using a workflow where Claude produces first drafts of chapters that JWS then edits into final form.

Personal context

JWS has a deep interest in speculative worldbuilding, particularly around consciousness, cognition, and the long-term trajectory of humanity.

Top of mind

JWS is actively developing "Plūribus ē Spatium," a work in progress, with planning underway for Chapter 5. The chapter is set inside a Simulation of the planet Asha ~80 years after Chapter 4, centering on Tarynon at age 80, and exploring how early G-sim access to the Sedron Time Stream suppresses productive uncertainty, manifesting as slower population growth, lack of initiative, and failed interstellar ambitions. JWS has also recently completed "The Sims," an eight-chapter story set in the same universe.

Long-term background

 JWS writes in a self-created Exodemic Fictional Universe with a rich, internally consistent framework. Key concepts include: femtozoans (femtozoan endosymbionts that bundle cognitive functions including qualia amplification, world-modeling, language acquisition, and love-detection gating access to technology-assisted telepathy), femtobot and zeptite endosymbionts, and G-sim/G-sym technology operating across multiple fictional Realities. Major lore pillars include: the bumpha (benevolent aliens guiding human development toward technology-assisted telepathy); the tryp'At of Tiz (a telepathic human variant unsuitable as a model for conventional humans); the Trysta-Grean Pact (establishing humanity's right to galactic exploration, won through a Time Travel War between positronic robots and the bumpha); the Hierion Domain (an alternate dimension used for alien interventions); and the Sedron Domain (a destination for species transcendence). Recurring characters across works include Tyhry (a tryp'At neuroscientist and Manny's agent), Manny (a bumpha), Marda (scientist running the Asha experiments), Tarynon (first Asha-born human with a birth G-sim), Lori, Eddy, Zeta, Anthony, Nyrtia, Diasma, and the eight Ary clones of Tiz.

 Other AI changes. Google is terminating both Whisk and ImageFX. There has been a major update to Leonardo which altered the user interface and seems to include as a priority depicting women with scars on their noses, wrinkles and black eyes making them look like they have been punched in a fight. I use GraphicConverter to do repair of AI-generated images. I used Gemini (in the ending credits of the video, below, "Gemini" is incorrectly shown as "Gemin") and OpenArt to make the gardening video shown below.


Next: Claude's draft of Chapter 5 of "Plūribus ē Spatium"

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