Copernick's Rebellion

We are happy to republish Copernick’s Rebellion because it is better now than when it was first published almost 25 years ago.

At the time, genetic engineering was only for science fiction and then only for very speculative science fiction. Everyone knew that someday, somewhere, we would have corn that resisted rot and tomatoes that stayed fresh longer than usual, but no one would have believed trees that grew golden apples and engineered sentient bio-beings.

We knew the theory about DNA, but did not have the sequence for even the simplest bacteria.

Now, in the real world, you can order mice with genes that glow in the dark when activated. Want to research a gene? Phone the lab and they will splice in a bioluminescence gene along with the one that you want to research. $20,000 and they will breed you a litter of custom mice with genes that glow.

We now have sequenced an entire human genome, decoded the rat and several other species. It is only a matter of time before we can build a person from scratch. The problem is now only complexity, not science. When we decide to build a self aware bio-organism, we’ll do it.

Twenty five years ago, this book was a hard sell for a new author. Now it is current. Virtually everything in this book is possible, from the tree houses, to the trees with golden apples, to the fauns.

Come look at a future that is more possible now than when it was written.

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Satyrical

She looks somewhat like a satyr on the cover, but I take it her origin is genetic engineering then, rather than fantasy?

I really like this approach, human-animal hybrids. Would we not treat as equals those who shared our intelligence but had such a dramatically different appearance?

Should the appearance be half-half as it appears with her, would we feel more racism towards them, or towards those 100% similar save for their skin colour? Honestly, I don't even know. With the way we fix in on details, it might make all the difference for ignoring all things, and her face is like that of another.

Interesting Comment

Yes, the faun is a genetically engineered critter, and that was a really horrible pun -- "satyrical". ;)

Apropos of nothing, have you thought about expanding upon that idea?

What if we had genetically engineered servants/maids/waitrons/etc.? How would we treat them? How would they feel about it? Would they eventually rebel, or would they be engineered to be docile? What happens if "something went wrong"? Would there be "blade runners" to "retire" them? How would one control them? What are the ethics/morals about creating a new intelligent species?

Sounds like the basis of a good story to me.