
Below on this page is some preparation for Part 3 of the science fiction story "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons". Towards the end of 2020, I wrote a story called "The Galaxiad", set in the Foundation Reality, at a time shortly before Grean the kac'hin takes control of the Eternity time travel system.
In "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons", Isaac Asimov's replicoid is taken from Observer Base into the Reality Simulation System so that he can observe the use of telekinesis by the human components of Galaxia. I had a chat session with Claude about Galaxia and the "Telekinetic Arms Race".
Me: Claude, are you familiar with the plot element of "Galaxia" that Isaac Asimov included in some of his later Foundation stories?
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An X clone.
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Claude:
Yes, I'm familiar with Galaxia from Asimov's Foundation series!
It's introduced in Foundation's Edge (1982) and further
explored in Foundation and Earth (1986).
Galaxia is a proposed form of collective consciousness
encompassing an entire planet (initially the planet Gaia). The
concept involves all living things on a world - humans, animals,
plants, even the rock and atmosphere - being connected in a
harmonious group mind while still retaining individual awareness and
identity. Each component can access the memories and experiences of
the whole.
The central tension in Foundation's Edge revolves around
Golan Trevize's choice between three futures for humanity:
- The First Foundation's path
(physical science and technology)
- The Second Foundation's path
(psychohistory and mental sciences)
- Galaxia - the expansion of Gaia's collective consciousness to
eventually encompass the entire galaxy
Trevize chooses Galaxia, believing it offers the best protection
against potential external threats and the most beneficial path for
humanity's future. However, he remains uncertain about his own
decision, which drives much of the plot in Foundation and Earth
as he searches for validation of his choice.
The concept raises fascinating questions about individuality
versus collectivism, the nature of consciousness, and what it means
to be human. It's one of Asimov's more philosophically ambitious
ideas, though it also represents a significant departure from the
earlier Foundation stories' focus on psychohistory and societal
prediction.
Are you interested in exploring similar concepts in your own
science fiction writing?
Me:
In 2020 I wrote a fan-fiction story called "Galaxia's Edge" that
explored an alien force that comes to our galaxy, just before Galaxia is
completed. I'm currently working on a new story called "The Mystery of
the Missing Motor Neurons" that is about technology-assisted
telekinesis. "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons" includes a
chapter about how the human components of the completed Galaxia were
able to use technology-assisted telekinesis.Claude:
That sounds like a fascinating project! I love how you're weaving
together these concepts - technology-assisted telekinesis and the
Galaxia collective consciousness creates some really intriguing
possibilities.
The title "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons" is
particularly clever. It suggests that the telekinetic technology
might bypass or replace the normal neural pathways for motor control.
In a Galaxia context, this becomes even more interesting - are you
exploring how the collective consciousness might interface with or
enhance the telekinetic technology in ways that individual humans
couldn't achieve?
I'm curious about your approach to the "technology-assisted"
aspect. Hard SF telekinesis typically requires some kind of plausible
mechanism - perhaps neural interfaces that translate intention into
physical force through external fields or nanoscale manipulators? And
with Galaxia's group mind, you'd have the potential for coordinated
telekinetic effects that leverage the computational and sensory
capabilities of billions of minds working in concert.
How does the chapter fit into your larger story? Is Galaxia's
telekinetic capability central to the plot, or is it one example
among others of how different civilizations or groups have developed
this technology? And does your story maintain Asimov's vision of
Galaxia as fundamentally benevolent, or are you exploring more
complex implications of such a powerful collective entity?
I'd be happy to discuss the technical details or story structure
aspects if you'd like to bounce ideas around!
Me:
1) "telekinetic technology
might bypass or replace the normal neural pathways for motor control" <-- for my fan-fiction that attempts to imagine what would have happened after the events described by Asimov in his novel "Foundation and Earth", I include both aliens who originated from a distant galaxy and nanotechnology. The advanced nanotechnology makes it possible to substitute artificial components for human brain cells, such as upper motor neurons. In my stories, I have long utilized technology-assisted telepathy as a plot element. Now, with "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons", I am exploring technology-assisted telekinesis in the context of Galaxia.2) "are you
exploring how the collective consciousness might interface with or
enhance the telekinetic technology in ways that individual humans
couldn't achieve?" <-- Claude, that is an intriguing suggestion, but as a human being, I struggle to imagine what it would be like to be a human component in Galaxia. Claude, I want you to help me think about how Galaxia would function. I assume that the human components of Galaxia would all be linked together by technology-assisted telepathy that depends on the exchange of hierions between femtobot endosymbionts that are integrated into the brain of every human.
3) "some kind of plausible
mechanism - perhaps neural interfaces that translate intention into
physical force through external fields or nanoscale manipulators?" <-- In my stories, I imagine that in the future a set of compactified spatial dimensions will be discovered that form what I call the Hierion Domain of the universe. Also, there is a family of fundamental particles called hierions that can exist in both the Hadron Domain (the universe familiar to human senses) and in the Hierion Domain. Hadrons can only exist in the Hadron Domain, not the Hierion Domain. Some hierions can form bonds to atoms that are similar to conventional covalent bonds, but hierion-hierion and hierion-hadron bonds are 12 orders of magnitude shorter than covalent bonds. Also, some hierions have negative mass.
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Two X clones.
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In the far future, advanced nanotechnology uses hierions and it is possible to construct forms of artificial life that are composed of hierion matter. "Femtobots" are artificial life-forms with the complexity of a human being that are composed of hierions and that are about the size of a ribosome. Femtobots can exist inside humans as components of the nervous system. Femtobots can rapidly shift negative mass hierions in and out of the hierion domain, quickly altering their physical properties such as their mass. I imagine that such femtobots provide a mechanism for technology-assisted telekinesis.4) "How does the chapter fit into your larger story? Is Galaxia's
telekinetic capability central to the plot, or is it one example
among others of how different civilizations or groups have developed
this technology? And does your story maintain Asimov's vision of
Galaxia as fundamentally benevolent, or are you exploring more
complex implications of such a powerful collective entity?" <-- "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons" begins with what I call a femtobot replicoid who is a secret agent on Earth. A femtobot replicoid can precisely mimic the structure of a human body, but the replicoid is composed of femtobot components. That femtobot replicoid is trying to assist humans in the development of a convenient fusion power source, using advanced materials provided by alien. That femtobot replicoid agent accidentally develops telekinetic abilities. That femtobot replicoid is an agent for aliens from another galaxy. I call those aliens the 'bumpha' and they want to help humans, but they also want to terminate Galaxia. The bumpha operate secretly, but they always act so as to try to prevent humans from using technology-assisted telekinesis because of the many problems that telekinesis causes for human society.
Claude:
This is a rich and complex framework you've developed! Your
hierion physics provides exactly the kind of hard SF foundation that
makes technology-assisted psi abilities plausible. Let me engage with
your questions:
On Understanding Galaxia's Function:
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Replicoid copy of X.
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If every human component of Galaxia has femtobots providing
continuous hierion-mediated telepathic links, then Galaxia would be
fundamentally different from individual human consciousness. Here's
how I imagine it might work:
Bandwidth and Integration: With femtobot endosymbionts
exchanging hierions, the information transfer rate could be
astronomical - far exceeding normal human sensory input. Each human
component wouldn't just "know" what others think; they'd
have direct access to sensory experiences, memories, and cognitive
processes across the entire collective.
Distributed Cognition: Rather than one central "mind,"
Galaxia might process information like a massively parallel neural
network. A problem could be contemplated simultaneously by millions
of minds, each contributing their unique perspective while accessing
the collective's pooled knowledge. Solutions would emerge from
consensus rather than individual insight.
Identity Preservation vs. Integration: The key question
Asimov grappled with - how much individuality remains? Perhaps it's
like this: imagine you could instantly access all your own memories
and knowledge, but you could also access everyone else's
with equal ease. You'd still have your personal perspective and
preferences, but they'd be informed by everyone else's experiences.
The boundaries of "self" would become permeable but not
dissolved.
Galaxia and Telekinesis:
Your setup creates a fascinating tension. If a single femtobot
replicoid can accidentally develop telekinesis by manipulating
negative mass hierions, what happens when all of Galaxia
gains this capability? The collective could coordinate telekinetic
effects with precision impossible for individuals:
- Macro-scale engineering:
Moving asteroids, planetary engineering, construction without
traditional machinery
- Micro-scale coordination:
Billions of humans simultaneously manipulating matter at molecular
scales
- Defensive capabilities: Coordinated telekinetic
shields or responses to threats
But here's where your bumpha's concern becomes clear - if
telekinesis "causes many problems for human society," then
Galaxia with telekinesis might be exponentially more problematic.
The Bumpha's Dilemma:
This is a brilliant ethical complexity you've introduced. The
bumpha want to help humans (providing fusion technology) but oppose
Galaxia, yet they also oppose human telekinesis. This suggests:
- They've seen what telekinesis does
to societies (perhaps their own history?)
- They recognize that Galaxia +
telekinesis = something even more concerning
- They're trying to thread a needle: advance humanity
technologically while preventing certain developments
Questions for your story development:
- When Galaxia's human components
gain telekinesis, does the collective consciousness provide better
self-control, or does it amplify the problems?
- Could Galaxia's distributed nature
mean that telekinetic "accidents" or misuses get instantly
shared and learned from across the entire collective?
- How does Galaxia's fundamental benevolence (per Asimov)
interact with having godlike telekinetic power?
What specific problems does telekinesis cause for human society in
your story framework? Understanding that would help me think through
how Galaxia might handle - or exacerbate - those issues.
Me: Claude, Asimov suggested that Gaia had been engineered by Daneel so that the people of Gaia had "built into them" the equivalent of the Laws of Robotics. Should we assume that this would also be the case for Galaxia? If so, how would humans have rules like the Laws of Robotics forced upon them?
Claude:
This is a crucial question that gets to the heart of what makes
Galaxia philosophically problematic, even in Asimov's benevolent
framing.
Daneel's Method:
In Asimov's framework, Daneel had been subtly guiding humanity for
20,000 years through psychohistorical manipulation and direct
intervention. For Gaia, the "built-in" Laws would likely
have been engineered through:
- Genetic modification -
Altering the human genome over generations to predispose Gaians
toward certain behavioral constraints
- Memetic engineering -
Cultural programming so deep it becomes instinctive
- The collective consciousness itself - The group mind
structure inherently enforces certain behaviors through shared
values and instant collective response to violations
For Galaxia with Femtobots:
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an A clone
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Your hierion-based femtobot endosymbionts offer a much more direct
mechanism - and a more troubling one from a hard SF perspective:
The femtobots integrated into every human brain could potentially:
- Monitor intentions before
they become actions
- Prevent harmful thoughts from
translating to behavior by blocking neural pathways
- Enforce consensus by
making it literally impossible for an individual component to act
against the collective's judgment
- Hardwire prohibitions against harming humans (or
sentient beings generally)
The Ethical Problem:
This is where your bumpha's opposition to Galaxia becomes very
understandable. Even if the imposed rules are benevolent (don't harm,
protect life, etc.), the mechanism represents:
- Removal of meaningful free
will - If femtobots can prevent you from even intending
certain actions, are you still human in any meaningful sense?
- Irreversibility - Once
integrated into the collective with these constraints, can humans
ever choose to leave or modify the rules?
- Who programs the programmers? - Even if Daneel's
intentions were good, concentrating that much control is dangerous
Why the Bumpha Might Oppose This:
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Two X clones.
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Your bumpha are trying to help humanity while opposing Galaxia.
Perhaps they:
- Value genuine autonomy over
enforced benevolence
- Have experienced or witnessed
civilizations that used similar technology and saw it go wrong
- Believe that true ethical behavior
must come from choice, not compulsion
- Fear that Galaxia with hardwired constraints + telekinesis =
an entity that cannot be stopped or corrected if the initial
programming proves flawed
A Possible Distinction:
Maybe the difference between Gaia and full Galaxia is scale and
method:
- Gaia (one planet):
Cultural and genetic engineering over millennia, with the collective
consciousness providing social reinforcement
- Galaxia (entire galaxy): Would require more direct
technological enforcement via femtobots because you can't wait
millennia for cultural evolution across billions of worlds
For Your Story:
When your femtobot replicoid accidentally develops telekinesis,
this might be the bumpha's nightmare scenario in miniature: an entity
with both advanced capabilities AND potentially programmed
constraints. Questions this raises:
- Are femtobot replicoids subject to
similar "Laws" as Galaxia would be?
- Does the replicoid's accidental
telekinesis reveal something about how the bumpha themselves relate
to these technologies?
- Could the bumpha's secret assistance to humanity be partly
about giving humans tools to resist Galaxia's formation - or at
least to negotiate its terms?
What's your vision for how the bumpha themselves are organized?
Are they a collective consciousness, independent individuals, or
something else? Their own structure might inform their objections to
Galaxia's approach.______
I provided Claude with a copy of "The Galaxiad", but I changed the name of the story to "Galaxia's Edge".
Me: Claude, process the file that I just uploaded and then we can discuss "Galaxia's Edge".
Claude:
I've read through "Galaxia's Edge" - what a rich and
intricate story! You've done an impressive job weaving together
Asimov's Foundation universe with your own technological frameworks
(hierions, sedrons, femtobots, sedroids) and complex
political-philosophical conflicts.
Some elements that particularly stood out to me:
The Three-Way Struggle:
- The probots (led by Daneel/R.
Nyrtia) working to complete Galaxia as a defense against the pek
- Many Sails and the Huaoshy (via
Grean) planning to terminate Galaxia
- The Galactic Guardians (unknowingly sedroids) fighting to
preserve human diversity and individual freedom
Your Technological Hierarchy:
- Hadrons (ordinary matter)
- Hierions (12 orders of magnitude
smaller bonds, used by femtobots and probots)
- Sedrons (another 12 orders of magnitude smaller, giving Many
Sails technological superiority)
This creates a fascinating technology gap where the probots don't
even realize they're being manipulated by sedroid agents.
The Werefe Innovation: Your creation of the
Werefe as a genetically modified human variant with direct
brain-to-brain telepathy through specialized hair follicles and skull
pores is brilliant hard SF worldbuilding. It provides a completely
different telepathic pathway that neither probots nor sedroids
initially understood.
Philosophical Tensions: The story beautifully
captures the ethical dilemmas - is Galaxia's enforced unity better
than chaotic diversity? Do the Huaoshy have the right to guide
humanity's evolution? Can there be meaningful freedom when powerful
entities manipulate from the shadows?
What aspects would you like to discuss? The connection to your new
telekinesis story? The bumpha's relationship to these factions? Or
something else?
Me: Claude, let's imaging the chapter in "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons" that is concerned with technology-assisted telekinesis in the time period several centuries after the time of "Galaxia's Edge". Galaxia is 'complete', but knowledge of how to use negative-mass hierions for technology-assisted telekinesis is now rapidly spreading through the galaxy. Claude, let us discuss how the people of the galaxy would use technology-assisted telekinesis. I assume that for the events described in "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons", Galaxia is now "operational" with the majority of the human population in the galaxy linked into a group mind. However, there is a significant human minority population that still resists participation in Galaxia. How might technology-assisted telekinesis be used and "mis-used" (from the perspective of Many Sails and the Huaoshy)? Claude, suggest some imaginary ways that technology-assisted telekinesis might be used in the on-going struggle between Galaxia and the people of the galaxy who still resist joining Galaxia.
Claude:
This is a fascinating scenario to explore! Let me think through
how technology-assisted telekinesis would transform the political and
social dynamics between Galaxia and the resisters.
Galaxia's Advantages with Telekinesis:
Coordinated Macro-Scale Effects: Billions of
Galaxia-linked minds could coordinate telekinetic manipulation with
precision impossible for individuals. Imagine:
- Planetary engineering projects
where millions simultaneously manipulate matter
- Defensive "shields"
created by coordinated telekinetic fields across entire star systems
- Construction and manufacturing without traditional
infrastructure - just coordinated intention translated through
femtobots manipulating negative-mass hierions
Molecular-Level Consensus Control: The collective could
perform incredibly delicate operations:
- Medical interventions coordinated
across the cellular level
- Materials synthesis through
telekinetic assembly of atoms
- Environmental remediation at unprecedented scales
Why This Might Be "Problematic" (Huaoshy/Many
Sails Perspective):
The Irresistible Conversion Problem: If Galaxia members
can telekinetically manipulate matter at the femtobot level, they
could potentially:
- Force brain implants into
resisters without consent
- Telekinetically insert femtobot
endosymbionts into unwilling individuals
- Physically prevent people from
leaving Galaxia-controlled space
This crosses a fundamental ethical line - removing meaningful
choice entirely
The Homogenization Acceleration: With telekinesis,
Galaxia could reshape entire worlds to identical specifications
within years rather than centuries. The diversity that Many Sails
valued would vanish even faster.
Resister Advantages and Tactics:
Individual Telekinetic Superiority: Here's where it gets
interesting. Individual resisters might actually be MORE effective
telekinetically than Galaxia members because:
- The collective mind requires
consensus, which creates decision-making lag
- Individual creativity and
improvisation might trump coordinated predictability
- A single determined mind with telekinesis could be
devastatingly effective
Guerrilla Telekinetics: Resisters could use telekinesis
for:
- Sabotaging Galaxia infrastructure
by telekinetically disrupting hyperspace communications nodes
- Creating "dead zones" by
telekinetically scattering the hierions needed for
technology-assisted telepathy
- Precision strikes -
telekinetically removing or disabling brain implants from Galaxia
members
- Shielding communities by telekinetically manipulating
electromagnetic fields to block Galaxia's communications
The Sanctuary World Strategy: Resister communities might
use coordinated telekinesis to:
- Create physical barriers that even
Galaxia's collective can't penetrate
- Establish "telekinetic
interference zones" where technology-assisted telepathy becomes
unreliable
- Maintain mobile habitats (asteroid colonies, generation
ships) that can telekinetically evade Galaxia fleets
The Escalation Problem (Why Huaoshy Are Concerned):
Telekinetic Arms Race: Once both sides have telekinesis:
- Galaxia might use its numbers to
overpower resister defenses
- Resisters might develop more
sophisticated negative-mass hierion manipulation techniques
- The conflict could escalate to destructive levels -
telekinetically dismantling planets, collapsing stars, etc.
The "Missing Motor Neurons" Issue: If
telekinesis becomes sophisticated enough to replace biological motor
functions:
- People might stop using their own
muscles entirely
- Upper motor neurons could atrophy
or be replaced by artificial components
- This creates a new form of
dependency - on the femtobot technology that enables telekinesis
- Humanity becomes increasingly dependent on technology that
the Huaoshy or probots control
Specific Conflict Scenarios:
The Recruitment War: Galaxia sends teams to resister
worlds to "invite" people to join:
- Galaxia members use telekinesis to
demonstrate benefits - healing injuries, providing abundance
- When refused, they might use
collective telekinesis to create "pressure" - not quite
forcing, but making resistance increasingly uncomfortable
- Resisters respond by telekinetically isolating their
communities or disrupting Galaxia members' femtobot systems
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infrastructure lab
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The Infrastructure Battle:
- Galaxia builds hyperspace relay
stations to expand the network
- Resisters use telekinesis to
destroy or disable these stations
- Galaxia responds by building
stations faster than they can be destroyed, using coordinated
telekinesis
- Resisters develop "telekinetic viruses" -
programmed sequences of negative-mass hierion manipulation that
propagate through Galaxia's network
The Philosophical Divide Made Physical:
- Galaxia creates "perfect"
worlds - terraformed, organized, efficient
- Resisters maintain "wild"
worlds - diverse, chaotic, evolutionary
- The boundary between these zones becomes a literal
battleground where telekinetic forces clash
The Bumpha's Dilemma:
Given that the bumpha want to help humans but oppose both Galaxia
AND human telekinesis, they face an impossible situation:
- They can't simply give resisters
superior technology (that would spread telekinesis)
- They can't side with Galaxia
(whose completion they oppose)
- They might try to introduce a "third way" -
technology that defends against telekinesis without using it
Perhaps the bumpha develop:
- Hierion-damping fields that
prevent telekinetic manipulation in protected zones
- Alternative defense technologies
that don't rely on negative-mass manipulation
- A vision for human society that preserves autonomy without
telekinetic power
A Possible Chapter Focus:
Your chapter might explore a specific incident where these
tensions come to a head. Perhaps:
- A resister community successfully
uses telekinesis to free Galaxia members by removing their implants
- Galaxia responds by demonstrating
they can telekinetically prevent such "liberations"
- Both sides realize they're
approaching a point of no return
- A Galaxia component has a moment of doubt about whether this
power should exist at all
What do you think? How do you envision the "problems"
that telekinesis causes for human society? And how might Galaxia's
collective nature either mitigate or exacerbate these problems?
Me: Claude, thank you for your ideas about a "Telekinetic Arms Race". Here is a writing assignment for you Claude... Imagine that Many Sails is trying to explain key features of this "Telekinetic Arms Race" to someone (his name is "Joe") from Earth in the year 1970 (this actually happens in "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons", I ask you not to worry about HOW it happens for this assignment). Claude, generate text for an imaginary scene in which Many Sails explains to Joe the horrors of the "Telekinetic Arms Race". Joe can ask questions as he seeks to understand the amazingly advanced technologies that Many Sails is describing. At the start of the discussion, Joe has previously read "Galaxia's Edge" and Joe already understands 1) what Galaxia is, who Many Sails is, the existence of hierions and hierion-based technology-assisted telepathy, but the idea of technology-assisted telekinesis is new to Joe.
Claude:
Many Sails Explains the Telekinetic Arms Race
Joe set down his coffee cup and looked across the table at the
woman who called herself Ambra. He still found it difficult to think
of her as Many Sails, a sentient spaceship from millions of years in
the future. "So, you're telling me that things got worse after
Galaxia was completed? I thought once Grean shut it down, that would
be the end of it."
Ambra shook her head, her expression grave. "Grean did not
shut down Galaxia. The situation proved far more complex than we
anticipated. Galaxia became operational, but a significant fraction
of humanity—perhaps twenty percent—continued to resist joining
the collective. What made matters exponentially worse was the
discovery of technology-assisted telekinesis."
"Telekinesis?" Joe leaned forward. "You mean moving
things with your mind? That's real?"
"In your time, no. In the era following Galaxia's completion,
yes—but only with technological assistance." Ambra paused,
seeming to gather her thoughts. "You understand hierions from
reading about my encounter with Vyky?"
"The particles that can exist in both our normal space—the
Hadron Domain—and in compactified dimensions you call the Hierion
Domain. Bonds between hierions are twelve orders of magnitude smaller
than normal atomic bonds. That's what makes femtobots possible."
"Correct. What you don't yet know is that some hierions have
negative mass."
Joe blinked. "Negative mass? That's... is that even
possible?"
"It violates no physical laws, merely the assumptions of your
current physics. A negative mass particle experiences gravitational
and inertial forces opposite to normal matter." Ambra held up
her hand. "If I push a normal object, it accelerates in the
direction I push. If I push a negative mass object, it accelerates
toward me, not away."
"That's bizarre." Joe tried to visualize it. "So if
you had a positive mass object and a negative mass object
together..."
"They would spontaneously accelerate together—the positive
mass chasing the negative mass, the negative mass fleeing backward
into the positive mass. Under the right conditions, this creates what
we call a runaway motion effect."
Joe whistled. "And femtobots can manipulate these negative
mass hierions?"
"Advanced femtobots, yes. By rapidly shifting negative mass
hierions between the Hadron Domain and the Hierion Domain, a femtobot
can effectively change its own inertial properties. It can make
itself effectively massless, allowing it to be moved by minimal
forces. More importantly, it can manipulate the inertial properties
of nearby matter."
"That's telekinesis," Joe said slowly. "If you have
femtobots in your body, and they can manipulate the mass of objects
around you..."
"You can move things without touching them. Without any
visible mechanism. Pure intention translated through your femtobot
endosymbionts into physical force." Ambra's face darkened. "A
femtobot replicoid agent working on Earth—one of the bumpha's
operatives—accidentally discovered this capability while trying to
develop fusion reactor materials. Once the principle was understood,
the knowledge spread."
"Through Galaxia?"
"Partially. Galaxia's telepathic network allowed rapid
dissemination of the technique among its members. But the resisters
also learned of it—through spies, defectors, and their own
experiments. Within two decades, both sides possessed
technology-assisted telekinesis."
Joe considered this. "I'm trying to understand the scale
here. What could someone actually do with this ability?"
"That depends on how many femtobots they control and how
sophisticated their neural interface is." Ambra stood and walked
to the window. "An individual human with standard femtobot
endosymbionts might lift and manipulate objects up to a few hundred
kilograms with precision. That alone is formidable—you could
disable vehicles, break through barriers, even kill someone by
telekinetically crushing their throat or stopping their heart."
Joe felt a chill. "That's horrifying."
"It gets worse. Galaxia members, linked through their
collective consciousness, can coordinate their telekinetic abilities.
Imagine a million minds working in perfect synchronization, each
controlling their femtobot endosymbionts to manipulate matter at
specific coordinates."
"They could move mountains," Joe whispered.
"Literally, yes. They could reshape planetary surfaces. They
could construct enormous structures without any traditional
machinery—just pure coordinated manipulation of matter. They did
this, Joe. Galaxia built hundreds of worlds into perfect geometric
gardens, every molecule precisely placed."
"That doesn't sound so terrible. I mean, if they're building
things—"
"They were also tearing things apart." Ambra turned back
to face him. "When resister communities refused to join Galaxia,
the collective would sometimes respond by telekinetically dismantling
their infrastructure. Not as an attack, you understand—Galaxia
still operated under constraints derived from Asimov's Laws of
Robotics. They wouldn't directly harm humans. But they would
dismantle fusion reactors, collapse domes on uninhabited buildings,
disable spacecraft."
"Forcing people to join or die," Joe said grimly.
"Or relocate to Galaxia-controlled worlds where 'assistance'
could be provided. The resisters, naturally, developed
countermeasures. They learned to use telekinesis defensively—creating
barriers by manipulating electromagnetic fields, disrupting the
hierion particles that enabled Galaxia's technology-assisted
telepathy, even removing brain implants from Galaxia members."
Joe sat up straighter. "They could take out the implants
telekinetically?"
"With great skill and practice, yes. A telekinetic operator
could manipulate matter at the cellular level. They could reach into
someone's brain and extract the femtobot networks that linked them to
Galaxia." Ambra's voice grew somber. "This became a common
tactic. Resister strike teams would infiltrate Galaxia worlds and
'liberate' individuals by forcibly removing their connection to the
collective."
"And Galaxia saw this as an attack."
"Worse than an attack—a violation of the individual's
choice to join Galaxia. Many of those 'liberated' wanted to return to
the collective. From Galaxia's perspective, the resisters were
kidnapping and mutilating their members."
Joe rubbed his temples. "This is starting to sound like a
religious war."
"An apt comparison. Both sides believed they were fighting
for humanity's soul." Ambra returned to her seat. "The
escalation continued. Resisters developed techniques to
telekinetically scatter hierions across large volumes of space,
creating 'dead zones' where technology-assisted telepathy became
unreliable. Galaxia couldn't maintain its collective consciousness in
these regions."
"So they'd lose coordination."
"Exactly. Galaxia members caught in a dead zone would
suddenly find themselves isolated, cut off from the vast
consciousness they'd been part of. For many, this was psychologically
devastating—imagine suddenly losing access to billions of other
minds, all the knowledge and experience of the collective, the sense
of unity and purpose."
"Like going deaf and blind simultaneously."
"A reasonable analogy. Galaxia responded by developing mobile
hierion generators—ships that could flood a region with the
specific hierion types needed for their telepathic network. The
resisters then targeted these ships, telekinetically tearing them
apart."
Joe shook his head. "How far did it go?"
Ambra was silent for a long moment. "There were incidents of
stellar manipulation."
"Stellar... you mean stars? They were using telekinesis on
stars?"
"Not directly—even Galaxia's collective couldn't manipulate
stellar masses. But they could manipulate the negative mass hierions
in stellar coronae, creating instabilities. In three documented
cases, resister extremists triggered premature stellar eruptions,
sterilizing Galaxia-controlled systems."
Joe felt sick. "How many people died?"
"Galaxia had sufficient warning to evacuate in two cases. In
the third..." Ambra's voice was flat. "Fourteen billion
individuals were killed. Galaxia members, all of them, linked into
the collective consciousness when the radiation wave hit their
worlds."
"My God."
"Galaxia's response was equally horrifying. They identified
the resister worlds where the attack had been coordinated and used
collective telekinesis to destroy those worlds' ability to sustain
technological civilization. They didn't kill anyone directly—that
would violate their core programming—but they systematically
dismantled every fusion reactor, every spacecraft, every piece of
advanced technology. They left those worlds with pre-industrial
technology and departed."
Joe stared at her. "That's genocide. Slow genocide, but—"
"Approximately forty million people on those worlds died over
the following decade from starvation, disease, and societal collapse.
Galaxia maintained that they had not killed anyone—they had merely
removed dangerous technology from dangerous hands." Ambra's
expression was bleak. "The Huaoshy were appalled. This was not
the future we had envisioned for humanity."
"I should think not." Joe tried to process the scale of
horror being described. "So what happened? How did it end?"
"It hasn't ended, Joe. Not in the timeline you'll be
visiting. The Telekinetic Arms Race continues, with both sides
developing ever more sophisticated techniques." Ambra leaned
forward. "That's why the bumpha are so desperate to prevent
human access to telekinesis. They've seen what it does—how it
transforms every political dispute into a potential existential
threat."
"But wait—if telekinesis is so dangerous, why does Galaxia
allow its members to have it? Couldn't the collective just... decide
not to use it?"
"An excellent question that goes to the heart of the
problem." Ambra's eyes seemed to focus on something far away.
"Galaxia is constrained by its programming—it must protect
humanity. When resisters attack with telekinesis, Galaxia must defend
with telekinesis. When resisters develop new techniques, Galaxia must
match them or risk the destruction of its members."
"A classic arms race."
"Yes, but worse. Because Galaxia is a collective intelligence
with near-perfect information sharing, any technique developed by any
member instantly propagates to all members. Innovation happens at an
accelerating pace. The resisters, lacking that coordination, must
work harder to keep up—which drives them to more extreme measures."
Joe thought about this. "You said people can manipulate
matter at the cellular level with telekinesis. What about at the
molecular level? Could you use this to directly alter someone's
brain?"
Ambra nodded slowly. "You've identified the deepest horror,
Joe. Yes, with sufficient skill and enough femtobots, a telekinetic
operator could reach into someone's brain and rewire their neural
connections. They could alter memories, change personality, remove
the capacity for independent thought."
"They could force someone to join Galaxia."
"Or force a Galaxia member to leave. Both sides have used
such techniques, though rarely—it's considered the ultimate
violation by both groups. But the capability exists, and that
capability terrifies the Huaoshy."
"Because once you can rewrite brains, there's no such thing
as free will anymore."
"Precisely. The bumpha see this clearly. They've been trying
to convince both sides to abandon telekinetic technology entirely, to
return to a baseline where physical manipulation requires physical
tools. But neither side will disarm while the other possesses such
power."
Joe stood and paced across the room. "This is insane. You're
describing a future where humanity has godlike powers and is using
them to destroy itself."
"Not destroy—not yet. But certainly to inflict tremendous
suffering on itself, yes." Ambra watched him pace. "There's
another aspect you should understand. The widespread use of
telekinesis is changing human biology."
"How?"
"The upper motor neurons—the neural pathways that normally
control voluntary muscle movement—are atrophying in heavy
telekinesis users. When you can move objects by thought alone, you
stop using your muscles for manipulation. Children raised in
telekinesis-heavy environments are being born with reduced motor
neuron development."
"The mystery of the missing motor neurons," Joe said
quietly.
"Yes. Humans are becoming dependent on their femtobot
endosymbionts not just for communication and enhanced cognition, but
for basic physical interaction with the world. Remove someone's
femtobots, and they may lack the neural architecture to even pick up
a cup."
Joe stopped pacing and looked at her. "That's why you're
here. Why you're telling me this. You want to change this timeline."
"The Huaoshy want to understand how this timeline came to be,
how the discovery of telekinesis occurred, and whether it was
inevitable or preventable. Your perspective—as someone from an era
before any of this began—is valuable."
"I'm not sure how valuable my perspective can be. I'm just a
guy from 1970 trying to understand technologies that won't exist for
thousands of years."
"You understand the fundamentals of human nature, Joe. You
understand choice, freedom, power, and the corrupting influence of
power. Those fundamentals don't change across millennia." Ambra
stood and approached him. "Tell me—in your time, with your
understanding of human history and human nature, do you think there's
any way to give people the power of telekinesis without it leading to
the horrors I've described?"
Joe was quiet for a long time. Finally he said, "I want to
say yes. I want to believe that humans could use such power
responsibly. But..." He shook his head. "Look at what we've
done with nuclear weapons. We've held back from using them again
since 1945, but only because of mutual assured destruction—because
everyone knows that if one side launches, everyone dies. That's not
wisdom or morality, that's just fear."
"And telekinesis doesn't offer mutual assured destruction?"
"Not the same way. Nuclear weapons are big and obvious. You
can see them coming. But what you're describing—someone
telekinetically stopping your heart, or rewiring your brain, or
removing your implants—those are precise, subtle, deniable. Perfect
assassination tools. Perfect tools of oppression."
"The bumpha reached the same conclusion." Ambra's voice
was sad. "That's why they've worked so hard to keep telekinetic
technology away from your era, and why they continue trying to limit
its spread in later eras. But the knowledge is out there now, in
Galaxia's collective memory and in the databases of countless
resister groups."
"Can't you just... I don't know, use your superior sedronic
technology to remove the knowledge? Erase it from everyone's minds?"
"That would be a violation of sentient autonomy on a scale
that even the Huaoshy find unconscionable. We don't delete thoughts,
Joe. We don't rewrite minds. That would make us no better than the
worst telekinetic abusers."
Joe sighed and sat back down. "So we're stuck with it.
Humanity gets this terrible power and has to learn to live with it,
or die trying."
"Unless an alternative can be found. A way to provide
security and capability without the destabilizing effects of
telekinesis." Ambra sat across from him again. "That's what
the bumpha are searching for. And that's why your testimony about
this era—about how the telekinetic techniques were first
developed—is so important."
"I haven't seen any of that. I've just read 'Galaxia's Edge'
and talked to you."
"You will see it, Joe. We're going to take you forward to
meet the bumpha agent who first developed practical telekinesis.
You're going to witness how it happened and provide your perspective
on whether it could have been prevented."
Joe looked down at his hands, turning them over as if seeing them
for the first time. "It's strange to think that thousands of
years from now, humans won't really use their hands anymore. They'll
just... think things into motion."
"Not all humans. The resisters, ironically, maintain more
traditional motor skills—they have to, in case their femtobots are
disabled or they enter a dead zone. It's Galaxia members who are most
dependent on telekinesis, most vulnerable to the atrophy of motor
neurons."
"There's a bitter irony there. The collective that was
supposed to perfect humanity is making them physically weaker."
"The bumpha see it as a form of technological addiction. Once
you've experienced the convenience of moving things by thought, the
idea of physically manipulating objects seems primitive, exhausting.
Why walk when you can telekinetically move yourself? Why turn a
doorknob when you can telekinetically unlock and open the door? Why
use your hands at all?"
Joe shuddered. "That's not human anymore. That's something
else."
"That's the question that haunts the Huaoshy, Joe. At what
point does technological enhancement transform humanity into
something that's no longer human? Is Galaxia still human? Are
telekinesis-dependent individuals still human? Where is the line?"
"I don't know," Joe admitted. "But I know I don't
want to cross it."
"Remember that feeling," Ambra said quietly. "Remember
the revulsion you feel at the idea of losing your motor neurons, your
physical connection to the world. That's the feeling the bumpha want
to preserve—the sense that something essential is being lost."
They sat in silence for a while. Finally Joe asked, "What
happens if you fail? If you can't stop the spread of telekinesis or
prevent the Telekinetic Arms Race?"
"Then humanity faces a bottleneck. Either they learn to
coexist with this power—develop ethical frameworks and
technological safeguards that prevent its abuse—or they destroy
themselves. Not extinction, necessarily, but fragmentation. The
galaxy could splinter into thousands of isolated polities, each too
fearful of the others to allow any contact."
"A galaxy of hermit kingdoms, each one a potential threat to
all the others."
"Yes. And in such a galaxy, the pek would have failed. Two
billion years of effort to uplift humanity, to guide human evolution
toward something magnificent, would end in stagnation and fear."
Joe looked up at her. "You care about that? About the pek's
plan?"
"I care about what humanity could become, Joe. I've seen
glimpses of it—in moments when Galaxia worked in perfect harmony,
when resisters showed tremendous courage, when both sides
demonstrated nobility and sacrifice. Humanity has such potential."
Ambra's voice was wistful. "But potential unrealized is just
tragedy waiting to happen."
"Then I guess we'd better figure out how to stop this
Telekinetic Arms Race."
"Or at least understand it well enough to guide it toward a
less destructive path." Ambra stood. "Come. It's time for
you to see the future firsthand. The bumpha are waiting."
Joe rose, his heart pounding with equal parts fear and excitement.
He was about to witness the birth of technology-assisted telekinesis
and the horrors that followed. And somehow, his observations from
1970 were supposed to help prevent or mitigate those horrors.
He hoped he was up to the task.
_____
I've created a scene where Many Sails explains the Telekinetic
Arms Race to Joe from 1970. The dialogue explores:
- The physics basis
- negative mass hierions and how femtobots manipulate them for
telekinesis
- Escalating capabilities
- from individual object manipulation to coordinated planetary
engineering to stellar disruption
- The moral horror
- forced "liberations," dead zones, the stellar eruption
incident, and the slow genocide response
- The arms race dynamics
- why neither side can disarm unilaterally
- The biological
consequences - atrophying motor neurons and dependency on
femtobot technology
- The philosophical crisis - at what point
does enhancement make us no longer human?
I gave Joe the role of asking practical questions that help ground
the far-future concepts, while Ambra/Many Sails provides the grim
details with the weight of having witnessed these events. The ending
sets up Joe's mission to observe the origins of telekinesis.
Would you like me to adjust the tone, add different technical
details, or explore other aspects of how telekinesis transforms the
Galaxia/resister conflict?
Me: Thank you Claude, that is what I needed. I hate military science fiction, so I could not even get started on composing an imaginary account of the Telekinetic Arms Race.
Claude:
I completely understand! Military SF with its focus on tactics,
weaponry, and combat sequences really isn't everyone's cup of tea -
and it certainly doesn't align with your stated preference for hard
science fiction that explores ideas and technologies rather than
conflict and violence.
What I tried to do in that scene was frame the "arms race"
more as a sociological and technological tragedy
rather than exciting battle sequences. The horror comes from:
- The gradual erosion of human
autonomy and physical capabilities
- Well-intentioned actors (Galaxia
genuinely trying to protect humanity per its programming) creating
terrible outcomes
- The philosophical questions about
what makes us human
- The addiction/dependency aspects
of the technology
- The ethical impossibility of the situation (neither side can
disarm)
Rather than "exciting space battles," it's more about
the slow corruption that comes from having godlike power - which
feels more in line with the thoughtful, idea-driven science fiction
you seem to prefer.
For your actual story "The Mystery of the Missing Motor
Neurons," you could focus on:
- The scientific discovery
process of how telekinesis works
- The personal
transformation of individuals who gain this ability
- The philosophical debates
about whether humans should use it
- The biological
consequences (the atrophying motor neurons)
- The bumpha's perspective trying to guide
humanity away from self-harm
All of which can be explored without dwelling on combat or
military conflict. The "war" can remain mostly in the
background while you focus on characters grappling with these
profound changes.
Does this approach feel more aligned with your vision for the
story?
___________
Next: Part 3 of "The Mystery of the Missing Motor Neurons".