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Crusade chapter 5 (standard:science fiction, 1831 words) [5/11] show all parts | |||
Author: St George | Added: Mar 11 2003 | Views/Reads: 2524/1900 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
chapter 5 | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story the right to revenge.” “All sentient beings are bound by their emotions Alecto, and emotions are triggered by forces beyond our control. In my case by brain chemistry, in your case because you were genetically programmed to value the lives of humans and the lives of their allies above all else. Your anger was not caused by the Megaeran's actions per-see, but by the way a couple of billion base pairs in your core reacted to the killing of those whose lives you are compelled to value.” She paused, “It's how you ensured I was willing to fight, isn't it?” “Truthfully, yes, as a sentient being you are free to take your own decisions, and yet your conscience compels you to fight.” “I'm a mental slave, forced to obey even by my own free choice, and yet I feel fortunate indeed because I was given he greatest gift of all: life, and sentient life even. But I know that I am forced to value your life over mine.” “Do you know why so few computer A.I.'s are given sentience?” asked the Captain. “Yes, as a vessel's size increases, so does the difficulty of maintaining a hyperspace portal; for a ship this large only a sentient computer has the power to maintain a large enough portal, in smaller ships it is not necessary. I was gifted sentience because it was necessary for my task.” “That's the reason you were given sentience, but it's not the reason so few others are. The reason is this; back in the early days of Neo Mir we constructed a simple A.I. and gave it sentience, but without any pre-formed moral directives like the ones that guide you. The A.I. was called psychotic at first, but we soon realised that it wasn't; what had happened was that without anything to guide it, it simply did what it found fun, it became sadistic and cruel, simply because it was more enjoyable than the alternative. Eventually it committed suicide, starved itself, because it didn't know that it was a bad idea. One other sentient A.I. was created and this one was given guides about respect for all life, also we prevented it from killing itself and it worked well for several months. It became quite a scholar actually, it would read everything it could on the internet but eventually it just got bored, cowed by its own impotence; it was terrible. I was there, no-one should have to hear a sentient being ask to die because it was so bored; we granted its wish and, afterwards, stopped all research into sentient A.I.. Try to imagine either of those two minds in your place, one would destroy everything just to watch it burn. The other was so emotionally constrained that it could do almost nothing but read. The reason that sentient computers are not employed on smaller vessels is because it would be unnecessary cruelty to the computers. As you just said, you are a slave, and we would not enslave any sentient mind unnecessarily.” “I think I understand, though I would rather be a slave than be nothing at all, Captain.” Alecto appeared to be content with the outcome because she disappeared leaving Carver to his thoughts. Meanwhile 1900 metres away and 107 decks bellow Carver's office, Squadron Commander Anna Forrester was not content at all. Theoretically she was in command of the 150-fighter strong ‘Vampire' squadron, but in fact her role seemed less like commander and more like trainer. Most of the 300 pilots/gunners had been rushed through the last part of their training because of the start of the war and she and the few other experienced officers found themselves finishing instruction that should have been completed at Cydonia academy. They were going into combat in as little as three days and although the pilots could fly the Super Hurricane and the gunner/navigators could use the weapons adequately, she still had doubts about the combat viability of several crews. There was one simulator aboard Crusader and it was going 24 hours a day trying to get the worst crews better. As she stood watching the interior camera of the simulator her thoughts turned guiltily to her computer terminal, in which was a letter of condolence to the family of the pilot now in the simulator. It was not the only letter she had written for the families of people she thought most vulnerable. She took only a little comfort knowing that, according to the Andurils anyway, human pilots tended to have better reaction times and reflexes than the Megaerans, still, it was comforting to think of the Anduril cruiser and corvette which between them fielded 120 fighters. Even the best human pilot was not a patch on an average Anduril. She looked through the interior window into one of the vast hangars; a few feet away a heavily built man carried four valkyrie micro-nuclear missiles, two over each shoulder as if they weighed nothing, the artificial gravity in the hangers could be decreased or shut off completely to allow people to move heavy loads. Behind him was a row of fighters each gleaming in its brand new black and silver paint, some of them had been customised by their crew, and the one nearest her now sported a neatly painted fanged mouth under the nose. It wasn't uncommon for crews to personalise their fighters and in her squadron the vampire theme was running strong, indeed her own fighter had, where the roundels might be on a terrestrial fighter, fanged smiley faces - it'd taken her gunner hours to get them just right. “Alecto, predicted casualties assuming 400 enemy fighters in defence?” Forrester demanded. “33%, commander.” “And if the enemy are in offence?” “72% Commander.” This was not good enough. As well as Crusader's 150 birds (slang for fighters), there were 55 aboard Broadsword and 120 Anduril Xetâls, 335 in all, and it would be naive not to plan on being outnumbered. Their tactics relied on outclassing the Megaeran pilots, because as far as intelligence could tell the Megaeran standard fighter, codenamed Kestrel, outgunned the Super Hurricane, which itself outgunned the Xetâl; both fighters were faster and more agile than the Kestrel though, which was where their strength lay. Tweet
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