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Science Fiction
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"...the people dealing with these new technologies will still be derived from the human stock we're familiar with today."
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Unique use of the technology of suspended animation.
Here's what it was like, after a mutiny!
“You don’t seem to appreciate what I’m doing for you, man,” Baker continued ironically, “you won’t have to consider oxygen or food from now on. This foul air is bad enough now as it is. And then if someone finds this ‘Pan’ drifting around a couple of centuries from now you’ll still be alive.” He was busying himself about the valves of the mixing tank preparing the gas.
Heath tried to raise his head. Then his arms and legs. He was securely bound to the table. A groan sounded behind him. Rawlins voice. Of course, they would have him in here, too. He thought furiously in his helpless position. Suspended animation! Conscious sensations would recede from him. There would be no feeling of cold or warmth. But his mind would be aware of things around him. His eyes would see with a sort of helpless abstraction. It would be a living hell! Death would be more merciful. Suddenly, a hissing broke into his confusion of thoughts, a swift hissing that carried with it an insidious sweetness. It was getting colder too. The preserving process was beginning !
“Sweet dreams, Captain!” suggested Baker, backing out of the gasketed door.
Heath felt a horrible nausea at the pit of his stomach after a few thin wisps of the saccharized gas were drawn into his lungs. He struggled with his bonds, pulling and straining with a desperate fury. Damnation! His brain was blazing with the gas-saturated blood surging through it.
Compare to moratorium from Philip K. Dick's 1969 novel Ubik, personality death from Harry Harrison's 1959 short story Robot Justice, zero-time jail from A World Out of Time (1976) by Larry Niven, Brainlock from Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988) by William Gibson and virtual punishment from Complete Sentence (2011) by Joe Haldeman. Comment/Join this discussion ( 0 ) | RSS/XML | Blog This | Additional
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Science Fiction
Timeline
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'... every veephone on the continent would display, over and over, two propositions.'
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'He wore spectacles with thick wavy lenses. The spectacles were intended to make him not only half blind, but to give him whanging headaches besides.'
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