"Egan, Greg - The Vat" - читать интересную книгу автора (Egan Greg)one thing to muse and fret like a tenth-rate philosopher, but here at last is a
test for his ideas that goes beyond inconsequential speculation. A proportion of the embryos are simply liquefied; the cell walls, and indeed all intracellular structures, are ultrasonically disrupted. The broth of chemicals this produces is then fed into a sophisticated purification system, based mainly on electrophoresis and affinity chromatography, and many valuable substances are extracted. The remaining embryos are broken into individual cells. In theory, perhaps, almost anything can be achieved with engineered bacteria, or some modified tumour cell line, but in practice there are still many properties of healthy human tissue that can't be faked. Persuading E. coli to churn out hormones like insulin or dopamine is simple enough; turning it into a perfectly functional equivalent of an islet cell or a dopaminergic neuron - an integral part of a complicated regulatory system - is something else entirely. It's simply not economical, trying to make all that human DNA work in a foreign environment, when the real thing is available for a fraction of the cost. Harold passes the refrigerated storerooms every morning as he arrives for work, and every evening as he departs. It's a relaxed, cheerful place; the storemen always seem to be whistling, or playing a radio loudly. Vans come and go at all hours, picking up the large, but light, containers of insulating foam in which the small, precious vials are packed. When Harold sees a crateful of the end product of his work being loaded into a van, when he sees the driver sign for the consignment, slam his door, and drive away, he says to himself aloud, nodding, "Yes! This is it. This is life." breathes slowly - through his mouth, hoping that this is the quietest way - and thinks about the trillions of cells of her body. If he stabbed her in the heart, only the tiniest fraction of them would be killed directly by the blade - just a few million cells in her skin, her soft tissue, her heart muscles. The death of her neurons would be almost coincidental, more a product of this organism's poor design than anything else. A slime mould would easily survive similar treatment. He stands for a while, waiting to see what he will do. Part of him - a small, vestigial subsystem with no interest whatsoever in brain physiology, the philosophy of consciousness, or even obsessive love - pleads fervently to be allowed to put down the knife and flee, but Harold pays it about as much attention as the soundtrack of a child's cartoon overheard playing on a neighbour's TV. He stands, and he waits. Harold doesn't mourn for the brief lives he helps create; he knows they die long before the most primitive thoughts or feelings have a chance to arise, and he can't believe there's a machine up in heaven, churning out a white-robed feather-winged soul for each of these tiny clusters of cells. Rather, he rejoices. Because The Vat says something about human life - human life of every age - that had to be said, and although today he is alone in heeding this message, he knows that in time the insights he's gained will be the common heritage of all humanity. Harold retraces his steps. He returns the knife to its place in the kitchen. He leaves by the bathroom window, and closes it behind him. He wanted to kill her, he muses, more than he'd ever wanted anything before. He |
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