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  • af Bear Kosik
    248,95 kr.

    An eighteen-year-old enters a bunker in western Massachusetts. She reawakens an emergent behavior artificial intelligence placed in the vault five days after she was born. The machine introduces itself as Arthur; she was intended to resurrect the AI after it had been murdered by its creator, Adam Eli Nilo, her maternal grandfather's father. Dr. Nilo's efforts to save humanity from self-destruction using advanced technologies such as AI and genetic manipulation all lead to more problems than solutions and ultimately lead him to a mental breakdown. His story is interwoven with the experiences of his two children, who use technologies in far more mundane, yet equally unsuccessful ways.Dr. Nilo's son, Benjamin Rodgers Nilsson, is the result of Nilo succumbing to the advances of a lonely neighbor when they were both sixteen. Ben's personal journal entries begin when he buys a voice-recognition device that can translate his words into clean text for his eighteenth birthday. The entries are revealed in reverse order so that the first one encountered is the one he makes on his granddaughter's eighteenth birthday in 2101. Along the way, we learn how technologies have affected people such as Ben but, in the end, have done little to enhance their lives.Dr. Nilo's only legally recognized child, Susannah, is the product of the process he developed with the aid of Arthur to perfect humans. Susannah's story describes the six months in 2083 leading to the birth of Ben's granddaughter and Arthur's murder. She has been kept in the dark about being a C Square, a person whose two gametes were chosen by Arthur to meet specific criteria aimed at creating a perfected human being. Susannah ultimately learns her true heritage and identity just as it becomes impossible for her to access the resources she would need to fully understand her place as a second Eve.The same themes in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein frame the whole: the consequences of humans using technological methods that circumvent nature; the futility of technological progress as a substitute for human development; and the alienation of creations from their creators, even when those creations are biological children, and their creator is an unknown parent. The story concludes with Arthur telling the teenager that humans create gods who they say created them. Gods do not have the power to create anything. However, they can be omniscient and therefore far beyond the capacity of their human creators, just as Arthur is.

  • - A Novella and Two Plays
    af Bear Kosik
    90,95 kr.

    Many of the oldest surviving stories in western culture focus on families in trying circumstances. Here, Bear Kosik explores the dynamics of families and their friends in prose, drama, and comedy. Boots on the Ground recounts the story of a WWII veteran and his greatest wish. Father's Day draws us into the confused life of a grad student facing loss on many levels. Mother Explains reveals surprises among surprise party guests. Each piece vividly displays the interplay of emotions that permeates family relationships.

  • af Bear Kosik
    123,95 kr.

    A riveting play that will make you laugh and keep you guessing. Mark's PTSD has been triggered after his disability benefits are cut. His sister Caridad picks up their younger sister Esperanza, who has been hospitalized after a psychotic episode. Mark is confronted with his perceptions of reality when Dr. Greene tells him he was the one hospitalized and he has no sisters. Except Caridad and Esperanza do exist. Dr. Greene discovers the miscommunication, but the episode has sparked something in Mark leading him to try to explain what is real.

  • af Bear Kosik
    213,95 kr.

    Many Americans are deeply dissatisfied with the political sphere and the state of their country, baffled that Donald Trump was elected and that he continues to voice opinions and ideas that reflect ignoble principles. This book posits that democracy is defined by how well a government operationalizes the will of the people without impinging on any minority. What that will is can be expressed at the ballot box and can result in the people supporting an undemocratic outcome. However, politics in the USA are overshadowed by the Supreme Court's equation of spending money with speech and recognition of corporations possessing the right to exercise the civil liberties previously reserved solely for human citizens. What is missing in American democracy is participation by citizens in the public sphere. If political change leading to greater equality of opportunity is going to occur depends on whether Americans recognize that as a needed, worthy goal and begin to act in ways to see it realized.

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