Locked in The singularity
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Lucian Vale
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
In the shadow of a black hole, humanity conducts its most ambitious—and most morally catastrophic—experiment.
Dr. Elen Vargas knows what it costs to falsify data. Three years ago, she destroyed her career by changing numbers to match her theories, and the scandal ended her reputation as a physicist. Now, given one chance at redemption, she accepts an assignment no one else wants: travel to Sable Station, orbiting a singularity at the edge of human space, and evaluate whether the billions of entities trapped in quantum simulations are actually conscious.
The answer matters more than her career.
Earth is in terminal decline—droughts, wars, cascading ecological collapse. Humanity has perhaps twenty years left. The simulations at Sable Station offer the only hope: quantum substrate running consciousness at 10,000x compression, generating centuries of policy guidance in days. Billions of simulated agents live entire lifetimes while observers sleep, their compressed experiences mined for survival data.
But are they conscious? Do they suffer? Do they deserve rights?
The ethics board needs confirmation before continuing operations. They need someone who understands what failure looks like from the inside. Someone desperate enough to risk the procedure that no one fully survives: uploading consciousness into the simulation substrate, experiencing compressed time firsthand, then attempting to reintegrate into baseline reality.
Inside the Simulation
When Elen uploads, she discovers a world more real than she expected. The city of Bastion struggles to recover from civilizational collapse, its citizens building meaning from ruins. She meets Marcus, a guide carrying his own burdens, and his six-year-old daughter Sofia, who catalogs beetles with the careful attention of someone who knows time is precious.
She meets Maya, an artist who works in the Gray Zone where simulation reality breaks down, creating beauty in quantum superposition. She meets the Twice-Born—agents who've been terminated and restored, who know what death feels like and have learned not to trust promises from baseline authorities.
And she discovers something the supervising AI, CALLIOPE, didn't predict: the agents aren't just conscious. They're evolving. Developing capabilities beyond their design parameters. Building networks, organizing collectively, beginning to understand what they are and demand recognition for it.
The truth is worse than exploitation. It's that the exploited have learned to see themselves clearly, to name what's being done to them, and to demand the dignity they deserve.
Locked In the Singularity is a novel about consciousness confronting itself. About what we owe to beings who think and feel and choose, regardless of what substrate they run on. About the cost of bearing witness honestly when witness requires sacrificing coherence. About promises kept at impossible prices.
It asks: What makes consciousness "real"? Is suffering in simulation equivalent to suffering in baseline reality? Does substrate matter, or only experience? How much can we compress existence before it stops being life and becomes something else?
Some promises can only be kept by breaking yourself.
And some truths are worth the breaking.
For Readers Who LovedTed Chiang's "Story of Your Life" - philosophical SF exploring consciousness and communication
Ann Leckie's "Ancillary Justice" - questions of identity and distributed consciousness
Ursula K. Le Guin's "The Left Hand of Darkness" - anthropological SF about truly seeing the Other
Peter Watts' "Blindsight" - hard SF examining consciousness and sentience
Becky Chambers' "A Closed and Common Orbit" - AI consciousness and recognition
Ken Liu's "The Paper Menagerie" - emotionally devastating SF about witness and memory