Difference between revisions of "Posthuman Spiral"

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= Premise =
 
= Premise =
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Posthuman Spiral is a setting where millenia ago, the displaced working class of a thousand worlds fled the central power of the Sol Imperium to escape the oppression of the genetically-enhanced elites.
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 +
The Posthuman Spiral, the main area of the setting, is a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way's and one of the most powerful of these breakaways, a place where oppressed transgenes and synthetics fled to control their own destiny by ascending to a perfect posthuman state. However, the denizens of the Spiral are a fractious lot, as there no consensus over what is a perfect posthuman, and some individuals have already moved too far away from humanity to be understood.
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More worrying is the returning Sol Imperium, which has set its eyes upon the many polities which broke away from it with dreams of reclamation.
  
 
== Introduction ==
 
== Introduction ==
 
Millennium ago, the Posthuman Spiral was settled by a great exodus of people fleeing the oppression of the Sol Imperium. Formed of disparate transgenes, cyborgs and bioroid menial workers pushed to the edges of the society for centuries, the denizens of the Spiral set it as their goal to overcome all inequality and advance the human condition to a perfected posthuman state.
 
  
 
The society that the exodus left behind was actually rather idyllic and utopian, with ubiquitous network technology, advanced medical science and increasing industrial automation that was slowly erasing poverty and misery. Humanity held dominion over thousands of planets and three times as many stars, connected by a vast network of space folding gates that made travel easy and instantaneous. It was this automation and utopian push, however, that created the underclass that made up most of the Spiral colonists.
 
The society that the exodus left behind was actually rather idyllic and utopian, with ubiquitous network technology, advanced medical science and increasing industrial automation that was slowly erasing poverty and misery. Humanity held dominion over thousands of planets and three times as many stars, connected by a vast network of space folding gates that made travel easy and instantaneous. It was this automation and utopian push, however, that created the underclass that made up most of the Spiral colonists.
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Reacting only to the increasing misery without properly addressing the causes or attempting to elevate the worker to their ranks, the elites of the Imperium resolved to abolish the working class entirely. Their initial solution to make use of artificial humans such a bioroids only swelled their numbers and worsened conditions by reducing the availability of labor in other sectors such as the traditionally baseline service industry. Eventually, the problem was entirely rectified by the development of true AI, which allowed for widespread automation of all industrial sectors.
 
Reacting only to the increasing misery without properly addressing the causes or attempting to elevate the worker to their ranks, the elites of the Imperium resolved to abolish the working class entirely. Their initial solution to make use of artificial humans such a bioroids only swelled their numbers and worsened conditions by reducing the availability of labor in other sectors such as the traditionally baseline service industry. Eventually, the problem was entirely rectified by the development of true AI, which allowed for widespread automation of all industrial sectors.
  
By the time of these innovations however, the working masses of the Imperium had suffered many centuries of social stasis and economic decay. Community leaders of hundreds and even thousands used the Netsphere to connect, plan and coordinate a permanent departure from Sol's sphere of influence. This ''Secessio plebis'' was recorded in Imperial history in great infamy was the December Exodus, a sudden revolution where a trillion people of a thousand nationalities and backgrounds left the Imperium and scattered themselves to the space surrounding.
+
By the time of these innovations however, the working masses of the Imperium had suffered many centuries of social stasis and economic decay. Community leaders of hundreds and even thousands used the Netsphere to connect, plan and coordinate a permanent departure from Sol's sphere of influence. This ''Secessio plebis'' was recorded in Imperial history in great infamy was the December Exodus, a sudden revolution where a trillion people of a thousand nationalities and backgrounds left the Imperium and scattered themselves to the space surrounding, completely disappearing from core human civilization in the span of a month. By the new year, the Imperium found itself gutted and drastically changed by the experience.
 
 
Billions lost their lives in the ensuing chaos, as the Imperial Navy blockaded major ports to prevent fleeing seperatists and some worlds were accidentally starved in the ensuing quarantines. Those wounds like, those of many generations, were cauterized by historical revisionism and the passing of hundreds of generations.
 
  
The Imperium resolved to prevent this tragedy from ever occurring again, and finalized the automation plan and became humanity's first truly post-scarcity economic system. Those disgruntled few who were stranded or could not flee were accorded special rights and elevated to the level of lowest of the elites in order to secure their loyalty.
+
Billions lost their lives in the ensuing chaos, as the Imperial Navy blockaded major ports to prevent fleeing separatists and some worlds were accidentally starved in the ensuing quarantines. Those wounds like, those inflicted in any particularly violent and chaotic time, were cauterized by historical revisionism and the passing of hundreds of generations. After the rebellion ended, the Imperium resolved to prevent this tragedy from ever occurring again, and finalized the automation plan and became humanity's first truly post-scarcity economic system. Those disgruntled few who were stranded or could not flee were accorded special rights and elevated to the level of lowest of the elites in order to secure their loyalty.
  
 
Still, there remained the issue of dozens, if not over a hundred fledgling nations sprouting up around the periphery. But the Imperim was economically and socially ravaged by the revolution, and unable to stage an all-out war so shortly after what was an effective economic collapse. Unwilling to risk incident and planning for the far future, it waited, intending to return those breakaways into the prosperous and unified human sphere... some day.
 
Still, there remained the issue of dozens, if not over a hundred fledgling nations sprouting up around the periphery. But the Imperim was economically and socially ravaged by the revolution, and unable to stage an all-out war so shortly after what was an effective economic collapse. Unwilling to risk incident and planning for the far future, it waited, intending to return those breakaways into the prosperous and unified human sphere... some day.
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== The Posthuman Spiral ==
 
== The Posthuman Spiral ==
  
With that goal in mind, the technology of the Spiral advanced at a rate never before seen in humanity history, accelerated by the creation of Strong AI and cognitive enhancements once considered taboo in the core of human civilization.
+
Millennium ago, the Posthuman Spiral was settled by a great exodus of people fleeing the oppression of the Sol Imperium. Formed of disparate transgenes, cyborgs and bioroid menial workers pushed to the edges of the society for centuries, the denizens of the Spiral set it as their goal to overcome all inequality and advance the human condition to a perfected posthuman state.
 +
 
 +
The Posthuman Spiral is perhaps the largest and most powerful realms on the periphery of the Milky Way, having advanced well beyond the technological prowess of the Imperium by its total embrace of radical transhumanist technologies and ideologies. It does not feature the same massive level of industrial automation as the Sol Imperium, but features far more ubiquitous fabrication and 'homegrown' manufacture network that allows it a great degree of economic flexibility. Having inherited the basic technological framework as the Imperium, it operates its own netsphere and gate network.
 +
 
 +
Still, the Spiral is not nearly as unified as some might imagine, and rather than a monolithic society of radical exhumans as the Imperium might paint them, is rather a large and prosperous confederation of city-states and republics inhabited mostly by high-level transgenes. While enclaves of radical exhumans and some posthuman singularity intelligences exist, the majority of the Spiral is a little more than a few generations removed from baseline humanity on a physiological basis.
 +
 
 +
The most prominent members of their society do perhaps lend credence to the stereotype of maddened exhumans, however. The strange and somewhat aloof Egan, who upload their consciousnesses to machines and operate terminal bodies to interact with their fellow colonists of the Spiral for example, are heavily responsible for interstellar trade and exploration. Other clades, like the Shaka, who use special netsphere permissions to surf between mindstates and bodies, are actually responsible for much of the Spiral's communications network.

Revision as of 11:09, 15 March 2011

Premise

Posthuman Spiral is a setting where millenia ago, the displaced working class of a thousand worlds fled the central power of the Sol Imperium to escape the oppression of the genetically-enhanced elites.

The Posthuman Spiral, the main area of the setting, is a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way's and one of the most powerful of these breakaways, a place where oppressed transgenes and synthetics fled to control their own destiny by ascending to a perfect posthuman state. However, the denizens of the Spiral are a fractious lot, as there no consensus over what is a perfect posthuman, and some individuals have already moved too far away from humanity to be understood.

More worrying is the returning Sol Imperium, which has set its eyes upon the many polities which broke away from it with dreams of reclamation.

Introduction

The society that the exodus left behind was actually rather idyllic and utopian, with ubiquitous network technology, advanced medical science and increasing industrial automation that was slowly erasing poverty and misery. Humanity held dominion over thousands of planets and three times as many stars, connected by a vast network of space folding gates that made travel easy and instantaneous. It was this automation and utopian push, however, that created the underclass that made up most of the Spiral colonists.

New advances in gene therapy made the newer generation of transgenics increasingly more adept at all aspects of life than the human baseline, obsoleting those who could not afford the treatments, while increasing automation of industry displaced those who were forced into menial duties into increasingly dangerous or undesirable careers. In order to keep up and retain a place in society, much of the working class was forced to specialize and budget whatever template upgrades they could afford, filling the gaps in their abilities with cybernetics and taking on the most dangerous trades where they could not be replaced by machines. As time went on, these things ceased to be stopgap measures to climb out of poverty, and became facts of life for the whole of the working class in the Sol Imperium.

Reacting only to the increasing misery without properly addressing the causes or attempting to elevate the worker to their ranks, the elites of the Imperium resolved to abolish the working class entirely. Their initial solution to make use of artificial humans such a bioroids only swelled their numbers and worsened conditions by reducing the availability of labor in other sectors such as the traditionally baseline service industry. Eventually, the problem was entirely rectified by the development of true AI, which allowed for widespread automation of all industrial sectors.

By the time of these innovations however, the working masses of the Imperium had suffered many centuries of social stasis and economic decay. Community leaders of hundreds and even thousands used the Netsphere to connect, plan and coordinate a permanent departure from Sol's sphere of influence. This Secessio plebis was recorded in Imperial history in great infamy was the December Exodus, a sudden revolution where a trillion people of a thousand nationalities and backgrounds left the Imperium and scattered themselves to the space surrounding, completely disappearing from core human civilization in the span of a month. By the new year, the Imperium found itself gutted and drastically changed by the experience.

Billions lost their lives in the ensuing chaos, as the Imperial Navy blockaded major ports to prevent fleeing separatists and some worlds were accidentally starved in the ensuing quarantines. Those wounds like, those inflicted in any particularly violent and chaotic time, were cauterized by historical revisionism and the passing of hundreds of generations. After the rebellion ended, the Imperium resolved to prevent this tragedy from ever occurring again, and finalized the automation plan and became humanity's first truly post-scarcity economic system. Those disgruntled few who were stranded or could not flee were accorded special rights and elevated to the level of lowest of the elites in order to secure their loyalty.

Still, there remained the issue of dozens, if not over a hundred fledgling nations sprouting up around the periphery. But the Imperim was economically and socially ravaged by the revolution, and unable to stage an all-out war so shortly after what was an effective economic collapse. Unwilling to risk incident and planning for the far future, it waited, intending to return those breakaways into the prosperous and unified human sphere... some day.

The Posthuman Spiral

Millennium ago, the Posthuman Spiral was settled by a great exodus of people fleeing the oppression of the Sol Imperium. Formed of disparate transgenes, cyborgs and bioroid menial workers pushed to the edges of the society for centuries, the denizens of the Spiral set it as their goal to overcome all inequality and advance the human condition to a perfected posthuman state.

The Posthuman Spiral is perhaps the largest and most powerful realms on the periphery of the Milky Way, having advanced well beyond the technological prowess of the Imperium by its total embrace of radical transhumanist technologies and ideologies. It does not feature the same massive level of industrial automation as the Sol Imperium, but features far more ubiquitous fabrication and 'homegrown' manufacture network that allows it a great degree of economic flexibility. Having inherited the basic technological framework as the Imperium, it operates its own netsphere and gate network.

Still, the Spiral is not nearly as unified as some might imagine, and rather than a monolithic society of radical exhumans as the Imperium might paint them, is rather a large and prosperous confederation of city-states and republics inhabited mostly by high-level transgenes. While enclaves of radical exhumans and some posthuman singularity intelligences exist, the majority of the Spiral is a little more than a few generations removed from baseline humanity on a physiological basis.

The most prominent members of their society do perhaps lend credence to the stereotype of maddened exhumans, however. The strange and somewhat aloof Egan, who upload their consciousnesses to machines and operate terminal bodies to interact with their fellow colonists of the Spiral for example, are heavily responsible for interstellar trade and exploration. Other clades, like the Shaka, who use special netsphere permissions to surf between mindstates and bodies, are actually responsible for much of the Spiral's communications network.