A simple implant negates epilepsy,
another upgrades low IQ,
yet another amplifies physical performance.
We're not talking 3-D headgear to improve complex visualizations - these are directly attached to relevant brain areas to control problems or enhance capabilities. Shouldn't disadvantaged children be given help to overcome obstacles to their success, to keep them off the welfare rolls as adults?
And people who don't use this technology - the pure humans - feel more-threatened every day by it. Should amps really be recognized as citizens? Aren't they now less than human because of their implants? From lawsuits to concentration camps to outright violence, if you're Amped, you're a target - until it's time to fight back!
The author of Robopocalypse brings us another all-too-possible view of a technology-enhanced future that's more nightmare than dream-come-true. Published in early June, you'll find Amped at your local library or independent bookstore.
**kmm
Book info: Amped / Daniel H. Wilson. Doubleday, 2012. [author's website] [publisher site] [book trailer]
My Recommendation: Brain implants to control seizures help millions like Owen;
why shouldn’t implants help amplify limited intelligence or upgrade physical
strength for those with challenges? Wealthy parents began enhancing their
children’s mental skills and physical prowess with amp implantation, then The
Uplift Act authorized amp implants for low-income kids to help them overcome
long-standing disadvantages.
Soon, the “pure humans” worry that the “amps” have unfair
advantages for college admissions, athletic contests, and job applications. Senator
Vaughn and his Pure Pride organization file so many lawsuits against amps that
their case goes to the Supreme Court.
Suddenly, amps are no longer full United States citizens,
are hounded by Pure Pride, corralled into small enclaves under constant attack.
All research on human amplification is stopped, and its leading researchers and
doctors are arrested - if the authorities can reach them before they commit
suicide.
A final message from his father shocks 29-year-old Owen to
the core: his amp is not just for medical assistance, but contains information
on amazing skills and abilities that he’ll be able to use some day. All he has to do is cross half the country
without being picked up by the FBI and find Dad’s friend Jim in Oklahoma for
some answers.
Did Owen really want to find out about the Echo Company of
amp-enhanced soldiers who can access levels of superhuman strength with the
flick of a mental switch? Can this calm schoolteacher stand by while Pure
Priders attack innocent kids who were amped under The Uplift Act so they could
concentrate in class? And exactly what skills did his researcher father add to Owen’s
amp?
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