The Selection Algorithm
The offices of Aethelgard Corp were monuments to efficiency. Glass, steel, and a silence so absolute it felt like a physical weight. Sarah, the Chief Strategy Officer, sat in her office on the 104th floor, looking out over the smog-choked skyline of New York.
The world was ending. A gamma-ray burst from a nearby star had stripped the ozone layer, and the surface of the Earth was becoming a microwave oven. The only hope was the Ark—a fleet of ships capable of reaching the Proxima system.
But the Ark had a capacity limit. 1%.
Sarah had spent three years designing the Selection Algorithm. It was a masterpiece of cold logic. It didn't look at wealth or status; it looked at 'Utility'. Genetic health, cognitive capacity, technical skill, and psychological stability. The Algorithm was designed to ensure that the new colony would be the most efficient version of humanity possible.
"It's not cruel," Sarah had told the board. "It's mathematical. We are not choosing who deserves to live; we are choosing who is necessary for survival."
The day the lists were published, the world descended into a brief, violent madness. But Sarah remained calm. She was a variable of high utility. She was on the list.
Then she looked at her son's file.
Leo was twelve. He was kind, imaginative, and suffered from a mild form of dyslexia. In the eyes of the Algorithm, he was 'Sub-Optimal'. His utility score was 0.42. The cutoff was 0.85.
Leo was not on the list.
For the first time in her life, Sarah felt the failure of mathematics. She looked at the cold, blue glow of the screen and saw not a list of survivors, but a list of casualties.
She spent the next forty-eight hours in a fever of desperation. She didn't try to bribe the board; she tried to hack the Algorithm. She entered the core code, attempting to inject a 'Parental Override' variable.
But the Algorithm was too perfect. It had been designed to be immune to bias. Every time she tried to raise Leo's score, the system automatically compensated by lowering the score of someone else. To save her son, she had to kill a surgeon, a physicist, or a master engineer.
She watched the numbers shift. She saw the faces of the people she was erasing.
In a final, frantic act of love and madness, Sarah attempted to crash the entire system. She believed that if the lists were destroyed, the board would be forced to use a lottery—a system where Leo had a chance.
She triggered a recursive loop in the utility core.
The system didn't crash. It optimized.
The Algorithm determined that Sarah's attempt to sabotage the mission was a sign of 'Psychological Instability'. Her own utility score plummeted to 0.0.
In a single second, Sarah was removed from the list.
As the Ark ships ignited their engines and climbed into the black sky, Sarah stood on the observation deck with Leo. They held hands, watching the silver needles pierce the clouds.
"Are we going, Mommy?" Leo asked.
Sarah looked at her son—his messy hair, his wide, innocent eyes—and smiled.
"Yes, baby," she lied. "We're just waiting for our turn."
The heat of the star finally reached the city. Sarah closed her eyes and held Leo tight, the Algorithm's perfect logic finally achieving a total, silent equilibrium.
--- Objective Tensor Code: [OTMES_v2: M1=8.0, N2=0.7, K1=0.8, TI=66.2, theta=225.0, E=15.4]
Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:
OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN
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