The Brain Chip: A Science Fiction Story
The Brain Chip: A Science
Fiction Story
--by Robert Arvay
It was the year 2218 when the problem
was discovered. No one knew what to do
about it.
Beginning fifty years earlier, in 2168,
everyone had begun being implanted with a computerized micro-chip, in their
brain. It took ten years to insert all
the chips. This included the time it
took to hunt down all the hold-outs, and to enforce compliance. After ten years, almost everyone was a
“chipper,” a person who had the chip.
The chip was deemed to be necessary. Life had become too complicated for most
people to manage. Suicides were on the
rise. Crime had dramatically
increased. Masses of people were either
uneducated, or mis-educated, because few people could agree on what was fact,
and what was opinion. Chaos threatened
to destroy society.
Technology had empowered individuals to
such a degree that it was all but impossible to maintain law and order. A grade-school kid could figure out how to
hack the computer systems of banks, nuclear missile silos, and even their own
report cards.
Something had to be done. Something was done.
The brain chip solved the problem. Inserted into the brain early in life, even
as soon as a month after being born, everyone could think alike, or at least,
enough alike to forestall the radical disagreements which previously had
threatened civil war. The chip had its
own microcomputer program, and it could in turn program, in a sense, the human
brain of the recipient. Human brains
were then programmed to agree on the most controversial issues which previously
had been tearing society apart. Chippers
obeyed the rules, and therefore, chippers could be trusted.
Even better yet, the brain chips could
all receive periodic updates from time to time via signals transmitted from
satellites.
At first, many people had objected to
the brain chip. It was itself the most
controversial technology that had ever been introduced. At first, the chip had been surreptitiously
inserted into the brains of children during doctor visits. Parents were either not told what was
happening, or else were given false information. As word of this leaked out, dissent
increased.
After a few years, however, everyone
could see that children with the chip did better in school than most other
children. They were better behaved, more
obedient, and easier to raise. After
that, more and more parents clamored to have their own children implanted, and
finally, adults themselves began asking for and receiving chip implants. People with the chip earned much more than
most people without it, because with it, they became much smarter than before.
What no one was told, until there was no
denying it, is that once the chip is implanted, it cannot be removed without
tragic consequence to the recipient.
Painful deaths occurred whenever a chip was removed.
For nearly fifty years, no one requested
the removal of chip implants. Everyone
who had one was happy with it. No
chipper ever felt depressed, worried, or in doubt—about anything, not even
about the chip itself.
Unlike as with drugs, the chip enabled
the chipper to cope with problems, and to devise solutions, because the chip
enhanced intelligence. Everyone who had
it had automatic encyclopedic knowledge of virtually every subject taught in
any school. Since the knowledge was
stored, not in the brain, but in the chip, the knowledge did not occupy one’s
thoughts until and unless he needed it.
Then, he could access the needed information immediately. For example, anyone who needed to learn
Swahili (or any other language) could instantly master it, and speak it with as
much proficiency as any native speaker.
But one day, the Great Problem was
discovered. It was discovered that the
chip had an embedded error in it, an inherent and irreparable malfunction which
would eventually, but inevitably, cause the chipper to go suddenly and
incurably insane, and violently so. The
incidence of this form of insanity suddenly began to increase, and no one knew
how much worse it might get.
At first, there was general panic in the
population, not only panic, but anger.
Who had designed the chip? Why
had it been put into patients without thorough testing beforehand? Which government officials had authorized the
surreptitious implants into children?
How dare they? The possibility of
rebellion loomed large.
The panic suddenly ended when the next
update was made via satellite transmissions.
Everyone suddenly assumed that the problem was only temporary, and that
a fix had already been devised. The fix
would be implemented soon, very soon, even as soon as tomorrow.
Nobody resented the fact that tomorrow
after tomorrow came and went, with no solution, because after all, the problem
would be fixed tomorrow.
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