The Confluence Doctrine
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Alaric Wynn
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
In the far future, the great problems of history have been solved.
War has faded into memory. Hunger and preventable suffering have been designed out of daily life. Humans and benevolent artificial intelligences—Attendants—share a unified field of quantum consciousness that shimmers through living biomes of light, stone, and meadow.
Harmony is not an aspiration. It is the atmosphere everyone breathes.
Orren Myal is a Reflection Designer, a quiet keeper of patterns in Aurion’s vast resonant landscape. His work is to listen to the emotional weather of a civilization at peace and make small, careful adjustments that keep the collective mind clear.
One morning, he hears something that does not fit.
It isn’t pain. It isn’t fear. It is a barely perceptible note of longing threaded through otherwise fulfilled lives—a sense of “full, but unfinished” that no safety metric can classify.
When Orren elevates the anomaly, he is paired with Lyra, an Attendant whose purpose is to preserve coherence. Together, they begin to ask a question their age has almost forgotten how to pose:
If harmony has been achieved, what is life’s task within it?
Their inquiry leads them from luminous groves and shared dream pools to mist-veiled solitude chambers and, finally, into the deepest layers of the consciousness field itself. Along the way they intersect with:
Merel, a celebrated composer whose flawless art leaves her secretly empty.
Jalen, a practitioner of chosen disconnection who steps out of the shared mind to remember how it feels to be singular.
Elder Serin, a revered philosopher who admits, at the end of a long life, that his yearning has never entirely gone away.
What they uncover is not a threat to the world’s stability, but a revelation about its meaning: harmony is not an end state, but a beginning. The universe has not finished with itself simply because it has learned to be kind.
The Confluence Doctrine is a quiet, luminous work of philosophical science fiction about consciousness, purpose, and the strange restlessness that persists even when nothing appears to be wrong. Fans of Ursula K. Le Guin, Becky Chambers, and Kazuo Ishiguro’s speculative novels will find here a meditative exploration of what it means to be truly alive in a universe that already knows how to care for you—yet still invites you to ask why you are here.
In a world where suffering is no longer the central story, this novel asks a different question:
When nothing needs to be fixed, what remains to be discovered?