Friday Fictioneers – Safe to proceed

PHOTO PROMPT © Susan Rouchard

He folds his arms, head tilted upwards towards a future only he sees. “The AI maps a pattern in genetic adaptation which we can direct. Why care what it’s made of? What’s important is what it does.”

Of course, I’ll lose, but I fight my corner. “Perhaps if we understood every tiny detail, this might not matter. But the flap of butterfly wings in the Amazon may cause Kansas tornados.”

He smiles that insufferable smile. “So you say, but really you’re invoking the soul. Almost none of the atoms from birth survive, but I’m still me. We’re safe to proceed.”

.

Friday fictioneers is a weekly challenge set by Rochelle Wisoff Fields to write a 100-word story in response to a photo prompt. You can find other stories here

49 thoughts on “Friday Fictioneers – Safe to proceed

  1. Yesterday locally I watched an Ai guided machine sorting medications, it was frighteningly fast, I thanked my lucky stars that the machine had it own enclosed room..

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Great story, Neil and as much as I was intrigued by the AI aspects, I was really taken by this line: “Almost none of the atoms from birth survive, but I’m still me.” Very intriguing. I have been reflecting on a comment a friend posted on FB recently about celebrating who you are and embracing your differences. It sounded great at first, but what if some of your behaviour traits are problematic or worse? I have been thinking about how we are constantly being refined by the world around us, our own self-awareness and are a work-in-progress. Yet, at the same time, there is something which is uniquely and beautifully us despite, as you say, all our cells changing. However, I would hope our DNA would at least stay somewhat the same. However, there are situations where it does change such as people who have had bone marrow transplants and end up with two lots of DNA in their system. Fascinating stuff.
    Best wishes,
    Rowena

    Liked by 1 person

  3. I I have little grasp about AI- its used to mean Artificial Insemination few years ago. I cant keep up with ne terms, but this is interesting, Indeed when practical meets hypothetical. A thought-provoking piece.

    Like

Leave a reply to Margaret Cancel reply