Banana Palace. Dana Levin

Banana Palace - Dana Levin


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length and width and depth and time and

      man a ship—

      where someone

      in a small room

      would tap out a message—

      to a far man on a far shore, and they

      would understand one another…

       3

      He shared all roads and he braved all seas with me,

      all threats of the waves and skies is what the Hero says

      of his dead father—but it sounded like soul to me.

      Guide companion—Captain

      of the ship of flesh I had to ride, where “I”

      was a third thing in the closed grip

      of the body’s vise—

      Marconi, he thought he’d hear

      the agony of Christ

      with a sensitive dial to help him sieve.

      He trawled

      the frequencies—

      for eli lama sabachthani no song lost—

      no impress of tongue and teeth that made a sound, ever lost—

      if you had a receiver—

      a virgin say, in a mountain crag, or a brain-bot

      from the tnano-future, did it

      matter which—

      You’d have a house

      for a god’s mouth

      and it would message you

      your rescue…

      Rescued from what is what I’m trying to mean.

      Rescued from what you have to fear the future

      more than you used to which sounded like the soul

      waving a series of flags at me—

       4

      We wanted arrival to be instant

      because we didn’t want to be separate

      from what we loved.

      Wireless, weightless, and omniscient is how we

      refined our machines—

      We had a dream

      that we could smash the bans

      of matter and time and

      still be alive—

      Was that the soul, wishing

      we would invent the body

      out of existence,

      so many of us now

      enthralled by doom…

      The students peer so deep into their handheld screens they

      look like Diviners.

      Each one

      a scrying Sibyl at the world’s

      end—

      scribbled-on leaves thrown out of their caves

      and into the wind—

      The only part of the Epic

      I make them read, just after

      the crew is borne ashore, but before

      the walk amongst the dead—

      The part between.

      Where there’s a body, agonized by light.

      And someone lost.

      And a query—

      Dmitry Itskov, 32, has a colossal dream: an early start

      for his own

      mechanical face.

      He’s one of the men with brains, wondering How—

      To evade

      the death of meat, he thinks—

      By 2045 we’ll have “substance-

      independent minds,” then

      no need for biology at all…

      At 25, he started to have the symptoms of a midlife crisis:

      the musical instruments unlearned, the books unread—

      The more he contemplated the world, the more broken it seemed—

      “What we’re doing here does not look like the behavior of grown-ups,

      killing the planet and killing ourselves.”

      Decoupling the mind from the needy human body

      could pave the way for a more sublime human spirit—

      It could allow paralyzed people to communicate,

      or control a robotic arm or a wheelchair—

      It could allow you to start your car if you think,

      “Start my car”—

      Within a century, we’ll frequent “body service shops,”

      choose our bodies from a catalogue, then

      transfer our consciousness

      to one better suited for life on Mars—

      “From the very beginning,” he said, “we realized Dmitry

      was not an ordinary person.”

      He leads a life that could best be described as monastic—

      No meat, fish, coffee, alcohol, or cold water—

      Meat gives him an energy he’s “not comfortable with.”

      What is the brain? What is consciousness?

      It contains plenty of terrifying, brink-of-extinction plot twists.

      It’s somewhere between a cellphone call and teleportation.

      It’s speaking with his voice in real time.

      Get right up close to Dmitry Itskov and sniff all you like—

      He has the kind of generically handsome face and perfect smile

      that seem computer generated,

      complete with all the particulars of consciousness and personality—

      Yes, we have seen this movie and yes, it always leads to robots

      enslaving humanity—

      For now, just acquiring a lifelike robotic head

      is a splurge.

       eighth century, Chinese

      The mind sports god-extensions.

      It’s the mountain from which

      the tributaries spring: self, self, self, self—


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