"Peter Watts - Blindsight" - читать интересную книгу автора (Watts Peter)

newsworthiness, stripped of their accustomed role in filtering
reality, had to be content with merely labeling it. It took them
ninety minutes to agree on Fireflies. A half hour after that, the first
Fourier transforms appeared in the noosphere; to no one's great
surprise, the Fireflies had not wasted their dying breaths on static.
There was pattern embedded in that terminal chorus, some cryptic
intelligence that resisted all earthly analysis. The experts,
rigorously empirical, refused to speculate: they only admitted that
the Fireflies had said something. They didn't know what.
Everyone else did. How else would you explain 65,536 probes
evenly dispersed along a lat-long grid that barely left any square
meter of planetary surface unexposed? Obviously the Flies had
taken our picture. The whole world had been caught with its pants
down in panoramic composite freeze-frame. We'd been surveyed
тАФwhether as a prelude to formal introductions or outright invasion
was anyone's guess.
My father might have known someone who might have known.
But by then he'd long since disappeared, as he always did during
times of hemispheric crisis. Whatever he knew or didn't, he left
me to find my own answers with everyone else.
There was no shortage of perspectives. The noosphere seethed
with scenarios ranging from utopian to apocalyptic. The Fireflies
had seeded lethal germs through the jet stream. The Fireflies had
been on a nature safari. The Icarus Array was being retooled to
power a doomsday weapon against the aliens. The Icarus Array
had already been destroyed. We had decades to react; anything
from another solar system would have to obey the lightspeed limit
like everyone else. We had days to live; organic warships had just
crossed the asteroid belt and would be fumigating the planet within
a week.
Like everyone else, I bore witness to lurid speculations and
talking heads. I visited blathernodes, soaked myself in other
people's opinions. That was nothing new, as far as it went; I'd
spent my whole life as a sort of alien ethologist in my own right,
watching the world behave, gleaning patterns and protocols,
Peter Watts 27 Blindsight

learning the rules that allowed me to infiltrate human society. It
had always worked before. Somehow, though, the presence of real
aliens had changed the dynamics of the equation. Mere
observation didn't satisfy any more. It was as though the presence
of this new outgroup had forced me back into the clade whether I
liked it or not; the distance between myself and the world suddenly
seemed forced and faintly ridiculous.
Yet I couldn't, for my life, figure out how to let it go.
Chelsea had always said that telepresence emptied the Humanity
from Human interaction. "They say it's indistinguishable," she
told me once, "just like having your family right there, snuggled up
so you can see them and feel them and smell them next to you. But
it's not. It's just shadows on the cave wall. I mean, sure, the