The Curator of Insects
Dr. Aris lived in the penthouse of the Zenith Tower, a glass needle that pierced the clouds of a city that never slept. He was the world's leading neuro-architect, a man who had discovered the "God-Key"—a precise sequence of neural stimulation that could unlock the dormant 90% of the human brain.
At first, the evolution was beautiful. Aris could calculate a thousand variables in a second; he could perceive the flow of time as a physical river; he could feel the emotions of everyone in the building as a symphony of colors. He felt like a god among men, a shepherd leading his flock toward a new era of enlightenment.
But the God-Key had a side effect: it eroded the empathy centers of the brain. As Aris's intelligence expanded, his capacity for human connection shrank. The people he had once loved—his colleagues, his partner, his students—began to look different to him. Their conversations seemed slow, their concerns trivial, their emotions like the buzzing of flies.
He stopped seeing them as people. He began to see them as biological data sets.
He established the "Curatorium," a private clinic where he "optimized" selected individuals. He didn't tell them he was stripping away their inhibitions and emotional attachments to make them more efficient. He told them he was evolving them.
One evening, Aris sat in his office, watching a monitor. On the screen, a subject was weeping, unable to comprehend why they no longer felt love for their children. Aris watched with a clinical, detached curiosity. He didn't feel pity; he felt the same satisfaction a collector feels when they find a rare beetle.
"Fascinating," he whispered, noting the exact millisecond the subject's grief turned into a blank, hollow stare. "The emotional residue is finally gone. Efficiency has reached 98%."
He looked around his pristine, white office. He was the most intelligent being on the planet, the architect of the future. He had reached the summit of human evolution.
Then, he caught his own reflection in the glass. He saw a man with a face as smooth and expressionless as a marble statue. He tried to remember the feeling of joy, or the sting of sorrow, but there was nothing. Just a vast, cold silence.
He realized then that he had not evolved. He had simply deleted everything that made him human. He was the perfect curator, and he was the only specimen left in his museum.
*** OTMES_v2: [M1:8.0, M7:7.0, N1:0.9, N2:0.1, K1:0.2, K2:0.8, TI:62.1, θ:6.3°, E:11.0] Code: V-PSY-05-Z-330
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OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN
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