Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Amped

Daniel H Wilson

Owen is a school teacher with a famous neuro-scientist dad. We are in a world where neural implants are becoming more common, used to treat everything from epilepsy to ADD. Originally developed by the military for enhanced sensory features, the public has become more and more wary. This novel opens with the US Supreme Court classifying those with neural implants as no longer a protected class. This means that you can legally discriminate against anyone with an implant, and that those with implants are not allowed to enter into contracts (they are too smart and can take advantage of normals). This sets up an inevitable battle of us vs them, loosely around civil rights, but more so about power and entitlement to control. Owen was an early recipient of an implant to control his severe epilepsy and is thrust into the center of the conflict. This scenario turns on its head the thinking about civil rights and any potential limits. Should civil rights be afforded to a minority (but dominant) class? Push this idea to the current day, what would happen if the 1% had their civil rights revoked?

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