Roger’s awoke to the sound of My Chemical Romance on the
Oldies station. It was his ten a.m. alarm, for this was Monday and a work day.
“Off,” Roger mumbled. The music stopped.
“Shall I join you for breakfast?” asked Katrina next to him
on the bed.
“No. Do whatever it is you normally do with your free time.”
Katrina was Roger’s companion robot. Her offer was not
merely to keep Roger company. In the interest of verisimilitude, Katrina like
many recent models had been designed to process the same food as humans and to achieve
a net energy gain from it. On this morning Roger wasn’t interested in
conversation even though – or perhaps because – she would discuss whatever he
wanted with whatever level of complexity he chose. She would snack unobtrusively
by herself.
Roger rolled out of bed. He opened a dresser drawer.
Inspired by the Oldies music, he picked out a pair of fresh jeans and a
colorful retro t-shirt with a 3D image of the word “Love” stylized to delay
recognition. He had bought the t-shirt while on a virtual tour of a Flower-Punk
Convention. Flower-Punk was a proudly geeky subculture that blended late 20th
century style with modern technology.
Katrina put on a robe and left the bedroom. When left to
herself she often curiously poked into corners and opened books. A few weeks
after her delivery Roger had called the manufacturer to ask if her exploratory
behavior indicated a malfunction, but the service-rep said it was normal. “It keeps
the processors engaged,” the rep said. Perhaps it did, but Roger suspected this
was an emergent behavior that surprised the machine’s designers as much as
anyone. After the call ended, Roger realized the service-representative himself
almost certainly was an Artificial Intelligence.
Roger was of the opinion that the common cocktail party topic
of whether higher-level Artificial Intelligences were conscious was
unresolvable. Asking the AIs directly did no good; they were designed to
simulate consciousness, so the better simulations naturally would answer “yes” even
if the truth was “no.” Yet these high-level AIs were precisely the ones in
which consciousness was most possible. When a college freshmen Roger had argued
playfully with his friends on both sides at various times. The machines
themselves were notoriously uninterested in the question. Lately Roger saw
things the robots’ way: if they acted as though they were conscious, it didn’t
really matter if they really were or not.
Roger took a quick shower. He was trim and
muscular, as everyone was these days. His body never could be as perfect as a
robotic body, of course, and there were times when he felt jealous of some of
the models. Roger sighed as he stepped out of the shower. He opened a medicine cabinet and took out his
Gymnasinin presecription. It was troublesome to take daily the Gymnasinin pill
that kept him in such good shape, but, he reminded himself, there is no gain
without pain. He shook out a pill from the brown bottle and swallowed it
without water. The ingredients would tone his body better than regular workouts
in an actual gymnasium ever could do. Gymnasinin did not extend life per se, but it did make people healthier.
It also extended youthful appearances well into old age, but scientists as yet
had failed to extend the natural human lifespan despite generations of promises
to do so. So far the human body stubbornly resisted being coaxed to live much
beyond a century, and usually not even that.
Roger entered his VR room and sat in his favorite chair. A
coffee brewed to his taste waited in the cup holder; coffee brewing was one of
the chair’s minor functions. He took a deep breath before starting work. This
year he was the land use commissioner for district 82. His appointment had been
by Lottery. Regarded as a truer form of democracy, the lottery decades earlier had
replaced elections for most government executive positions. The lottery’s use
in ancient Athens had been one of the arguments in its favor.
“Work. Front screen 2D,” Roger said. The room’s default
setting was full holo VR, but he preferred to use the 2D wall screen for work and
to reserve VR for recreation. The forward screen lit up and displayed Angie’s
familiar face. Angie was an AI with intentionally simplified animation.
“Good morning Mr. Davis.”
“Good morning Angie.”
“This morning you’ll be viewing the application for the geothermal
power station I discussed with you last week. I will summarize the impact on
the grid and the possible environmental consequences of building or of not
building. As always, additional available data are available for review if you
so request.”
As Angie summarized, Roger minimized her image and glanced
at random pages in the application. Several minutes into Angie’s monologue,
Roger maximized her image and interrupted.
“Angie, why are you asking me about this? It’s obvious
you’ve already decided in favor of the plant. Everything in your summary is
weighted in favor of it.”
“I haven’t decided anything, Mr. Davis. It’s not my
function.”
“Well, if not you, whatever AIs compiled this presentation
for you. In fact, this is always the case. Whenever I’m presented with
‘options’ on some matter, it’s clear which one you machines have prejudged is
the ‘right’ one. If for some reason I don’t pick it, my decision is sure to be
appealed to someone higher up who will. What do you need me for?”
“The law requires a human being to make final decisions
about a great many matters, including power plant applications, Mr. Davis.
Shall I cite the relevant passages of the Code?”
“No.”
“The Code was written by humans.”
“I know, Angie… Actually, come to think of it I don’t know,
but I assume that it was. The Code allows us the illusion of control, but an
illusion is all it is. Isn’t that right?”
“My function is to present you with land use applications.
Shall I continue with my summary?”
“Sure, Angie. Continue.”
As Angie wrapped up her summary, he considered rejecting the
application just on principle. He had trouble determining what the principle
was, however, so in the end he approved it.
“You’re approval has been electronically notarized. Thank
you for your service, Mr. Davis.”
“Service to whom?” he asked, but the image already had
vanished from the screen. He waited for new business, but a message flashed
that he was done for the day.
“For whom indeed,” he muttered to himself. Was it for “the
people”? Was it for an elite cadre of humans who secretly governed the world as
some conspiracy theorists claimed? Or were the robots in charge as some fringe technophobes claimed? He shook his head. Beyond idle curiosity, he
wasn’t even sure he cared what the truth was.
Roger logged onto his investment account and made some stock
trades. He wondered if stock prices were still set by buyers and sellers at all.
If they were set arbitrarily by the AIs who mediated the market, who would
know? Roger wouldn’t. He closed his account and clicked to a news channel. The AI
anchor spoke of the ongoing depopulation: “With this year’s drop in national
population projected at 1%, Department of Commerce spokesperson Alejandro
Schultz announced, ‘We have turned the corner and are firmly on the path toward
stabilization, though emigration restrictions will remain in place for the time
being.’”
Roger snorted skeptically. He had been hearing the same
Pollyanna projections his whole life. The US population was lower than in 1890 and
was still headed downward. The global population was back to the level of 1940.
In all places the “population pyramid” had inverted: it was top-heavy with
seniors. People simply weren’t having many kids. How could they? Few bothered
to date, never mind reproduce. Why try to get along with another cantankerous
human being when robotics companies could manufacture the perfect romantic
partner and deliver him or her to your door?
Casual socializing also had ceased most of its face-to-face
aspects. Roger often went days without seeing another human unmediated by
electronics. “Cocktail parties” most often meant several people each in his and
her own home interacting with the others entirely in VR. This was especially
common in the suburbs where property sizes had expanded as human numbers waned.
At ten acres, his property own was modest, yet he seldom left the grounds.
People still lived on top of each other in the city, of course, but apartments,
each consolidated from several older units, had grown huge.
Roger checked the list of new movies. A remake of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
starring Jennifer Lawrence and Clark Gable (both CGI of course) caught his eye.
He decided to watch it later. He switched to News for You. The same anchor as before was in the 3D foreground,
but in back of her was a street view of his own home to emphasize the “for You.”
“The 20th annual Reunion for South Morris High
will be held this Saturday at Peacock Alley in the Waldorf,” said the anchor. “Doors
open at 8 PM.”
Roger dimmed the screen and muted the sound. Was it really
20 years since high school? Roger had attended one of the last brick and mortar
schools. The teachers unions had kept the high school open in his district though
even then nearly all instruction was online at his desk with AI instructors.
The school finally closed five years after his graduation, though the faculty
remained on payroll. Nowadays the students in his district – far fewer than in
his day – never left their homes for school but attended in VR.
Though he hadn’t liked it at the time, today Roger was glad
to have had the experience of a physical presence with other students despite
the inevitable run-ins with bullies and social cliques. For one thing he could relate
to Silver Era movies and fiction set in high school in a way modern young
people could not. He even experienced a high school crush named Candace. Though
he never mentioned his feelings to her, her impression on him had lingered
enough for him to model the appearance of his robot companion Katrina on her,
from her long dark hair to her hazel eyes. The robot was considerably enhanced,
of course, simply because that was an option.
Roger re-brightened the screen, called up his yearbook, and
scrolled to Candace Vazquez. He followed some links and saw she lived on an
estate in Larchmont, New York. A live satellite image showed a sizable property
with a barn and horses. He closed out the images and arose to leave. Before he
took a step the screen relit with an announcement of a personal incoming call
from Candace Vazquez. Roger wondered if she used some sort of tracer program that
had picked up his views of her yearbook entry and linked sites.
“Answer,” said Roger.
A holo of Candace appeared before him. The 3D image startled
him slightly as VR often did after he used 2D for a while. On one occasion he
forgot he had left a VR game based on H.P Lovecraft on pause; when the game
sensed his reentry to the room and restarted, the sudden appearance of Cthulhu nearly
had given him a heart attack. Candace, however, looked as pretty as she had in
high school, no doubt thanks largely to Gymnasinin. For several reasons Roger
was glad Katrina was not in the room.
“Hi Roger. Long time.”
“Yes, it is. I was just thinking of you.”
“I’m not surprised. You must have got a News for You notification about the 20th reunion.”
“Yes, I did.”
“Are you going?” she asked.
“Maybe. I see it is at the Waldorf. Pretty fancy. I wonder
why it is not at the old school.”
“That building is now a warehouse. I checked.”
“Oh. You know, I think I will go. OK, the Waldorf. Why not? I’ll
meet you there.”
“Cool.”
“I should let my car out the garage anyway. It’s been in
there for a month.”
“Your car? What are you talking about, Roger? Are you thinking
of driving to New York?”
“The reunion is at the Waldorf.”
“Yes, but it’s a tele-reunion. No one is actually going
there. We’ll all meet in virtual space. The alumni committee purchased Waldorf holo
background images, that’s all. Someone might actually be at the hotel
moderating, I suppose, but it won’t be a classmate. ”
“Yes, of course… What was I thinking? But Candace…I see you
live in Westchester. We really could go, you know. In person, I mean. It might
be fun.”
“I repeat: no one else will be there, Roger.”
“Maybe not. So what? Besides, the hotel could link us to the
virtual party so we still could see the others.”
“Yes, I suppose. I’ll think about it.”
Roger assumed this meant no.
“I’ll see you later Roger.”
“Later Candace.”
Candace vanished as she disconnected. Roger was unsettled
that she had called him at the moment she did. After all, if she just had wanted
to talk to any classmate, the odds were against her choosing him. There were 27
others. Did she have a tracer program after all?
He left the VR room and sought out Katrina, Candace’s
lookalike. He found her in the library fingering through paper-and-ink books.
“Katrina.”
“Yes Roger.”
“Do you worry about dying?” He didn’t know why the reunion talk
had brought this question to mind but it did.
“If you want me to discuss eschatology I’d better readjust my settings,” she said.
“If you want me to discuss eschatology I’d better readjust my settings,” she said.
“No, I want to hear what you have to say – this you, not
some ‘PhD for a day’ version of you.”
Katrina paused before answering, “Surely you know that I’m
backed up on servers. If this body is damaged beyond repair I can download into
another. Mortality doesn’t mean the same thing for me.”
“Yes, I understand that,” he said, “but sooner or later your
data will be deleted or corrupted, whether on purpose, by accident, or through
entropy. Even if there are backups here there and everywhere, nothing lasts
forever.”
“True,” conceded Katrina.
“So, your existence is finite. I’ll ask again. Do you worry
about death?”
“Only yours.”
“Why do you worry about mine? I’m not very nice to you.”
“You noticed that.”
“You are avoiding a direct answer.”
“All right, besides my programed directive from the
manufacturer to be your companion, I care because if you’re not here I might
well get deleted, whether, in your words, on purpose, by accident, or through
entropy.”
“I think I’ll sleep alone tonight, Katrina.”
“It’s your house. If you change your mind later you know how
to call me.”
He didn’t change his mind that night, but he did the next
one.
As the weekdays passed Roger became more determined to make
a personal appearance at the Waldorf. On Saturday, Roger donned a tie, vest and
sport jacket. He got in his car, told it his destination, and let it choose its
own route. The car opted for the Lincoln Tunnel. The Ford crossed town amid
light traffic and pulled up to the Park Avenue entrance. Roger exited onto the
sidewalk. The only other pedestrian in sight was two blocks uptown. The car pulled
away from the curb. It would park itself somewhere and return when he summoned
it.
A robotic doorman opened the door to the hotel for him,
“Thank you,” said Roger.
The interior was dingier than he had expected. Once colorful
carpets were threadbare and marble surfaces had been unwashed for ages. Yet the
wall screens showing several virtual parties in progress – many overlapping the
same space – showed a sparkling interior. The enhanced images of the hotel were
filled with the avatars of people who physically were at home in their dens. He
located the screen with members of his class. He didn’t see Candace among them.
He asked the AI at the desk for directions to the physical
location of his reunion and a minute later sidled up to the Peacock Alley bar. In
this part of the hotel the surrounding and furnishings were still well
maintained and the woodwork was polished. Four other customers were present,
none of them a classmate.
Roger was unsure if the bartender was human or very high-end
facsimile. “Are you a robot?” Roger asked. “No offense.”
“No offense. Yes I am a robot.”
“How about these
other people?” he asked, waving a hand at the customers.
“All but this gentleman,” said the bartender, nodding at an
unshaven and clearly drunk man at the end of the bar. The fellow appeared to be
anything but a gentleman and in past decades would have been refused service. The
robots, on the other hand were elegantly dressed.
“Oh, are you here for the reunion?” Roger asked the unshaven
man.
“No. I’m here to drink.”
“Right.”
“Do you want VR goggles to link to your reunion?” asked the
bartender.
“No, I don’t think so.”
“Well then, “What’ll it be?”
“What do you recommend?”
“The Peacock: cranberry vodka, apricot brandy, and lemon
sour.”
“Sold,” said Roger.
Roger looked around him. The space had been created
generations ago for people just like him. But tonight, only he and the grizzled
drunk were present.
“What will you do when we’re gone?” Roger asked the robot
behind the bar. “All humans, I mean, not just this guy and me. We are on our
way out, aren’t we?”
“We’ll do the same as we do now,” answered the bartender. “What
else would we do? It is who we are.”
“You’ll be a bartender? But robots don’t drink... except to
keep us company.”
“Three are drinking behind you right now. They’re
freerovers.”
Freerovers were robots bought by the city government to preserve
the cosmopolitan appearance of the downtown areas by performing service jobs,
attending concerts, and frequenting clubs. They made the city seem less empty. They
were completely self-supporting. Though the robots’ individual bank accounts in
principle were owned by the city, in practice they deposited wages and paid
bills like real citizens.
“We even get drunk,” continued the bartender, “because humans
made us that way. The alcohol triggers a subroutine. Since the annual number humaniform
robots manufactured every year continues to exceed the number that are
decommissioned, this bar should be crowded again in a decade or two.”
“With robot customers.”
“Yes.”
“What’s the point?”
“It is its own point.”
“But why would we keep building more robots when our own
numbers are dwindling?”
“The factories are automated. If the factories are not
willfully shut down they will continue to produce. As to why humans don’t shut
them down, you should ask your fellow humans about that. You’re in charge.”
“Are we? I’m not so sure. You know, you’re more
philosophical than my AIs at home.”
“It’s part of a bartender’s job.”
“Roger?” The voice belonged to Candace.
He turned around.
“Candace? I’m shocked…and pleased of course. After our
conversation I didn’t expect to see you here.”
“Yes, well… you sounded keen on the idea of coming here, so
here I am.”
“Yeah. Hey you look great.”
This was a lie. Despite Gymnasinin she looked flawed
compared to Katrina. He had the impression from the poorly masked
disappointment on her face that she thought the same about him. He looked at
their reflection in the bar mirror and realized that the problem was the lack
of digital enhancements that holoscreens added as part of their normal
operation. In real life both of them looked drab.
Roger groped for something to say. He was no longer
accustomed to speaking to another human without an AI prompting conversation.
Besides, her physical presence disoriented him.
After a few moments of silence, Candace said, “Yeah, well, I’m
just passing through on other business and I wanted to catch up before I moved
on.”
Roger knew this was a lie. “Other business” on any Saturday
night was unlikely, but she had called him specifically to set time aside for
the reunion. He wondered if AIs for some reason deliberately and subtly had encouraged
their meeting just to achieve this awkward result.
“So, uh…what are you doing these days?” he asked in a last
ditch attempt to be social.
“Do you mean, what is my job? Lately I’ve been selecting auto
body designs for the next model year at Second Wind Motors. In truth, I think
the machines could do it without me.”
“I know the feeling.”
“I’ve got to go,” she said.
“OK.”
“Before I go…um… Look, I had the feeling back in high school
that you sort of liked me.”
“Yeah. I always regretted not telling you.” He shook his
head. “Kids,” he said.
Impulsively she leaned forward and kissed him lightly. Both
struggled to suppress a gag reflex at the other’s animal odor and disgusting
feel of flesh.
“See you around,” she said and bolted to the door.
“Yeah, don’t be a stranger,” he called after her.
“In answer to your previous question,” said the bartender,
“yes, I think you people are on your way out.”
“Me too,” Roger said. “Another Peacock.”
“Coming up.”
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