by T. Calder
Humanity may not be the final stage of intelligence, but a transition point. As AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) emerges and potentially surpasses us in every domain, the real challenge is not survival through resistance, but relevance through adaptation. The most viable future may not be conflict—but coexistence, where humans evolve faster with guidance rather than dominance.
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by T. Calder
Who would you become if you could live for 500 years, or 2,000, or even 5,000, without aging much past your physical prime? At first that sounds like an extraordinary gift. More time to learn, build, love, recover from mistakes, and witness ages no one else will ever see. But even in a normal lifetime, people change in deep ways. Pleasures dull, lines blur, black and white becomes shades of gray. If that much can happen in a few decades, what would happen across millennia? Would you even recognize yourself?
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by T. Calder
What if we look at time travel not from the scientific side of how a machine would work, but from the traveler’s intimate personal experience. If time is not just a line moving forward, but something that may exist all at once from a higher perspective, then changing what we call “the past” may not destroy one reality and replace it with another in some neat mechanical way. It may simply leave one person with memories that no longer belong to the version of reality everyone else is living. That is where the wonder is for me: not in the technology, but in what it would feel like to walk through a familiar world while quietly being the only on who remembers another one just as vividly.
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by T. Calder
About 66 million years ago, a massive impact changed Earth forever and ended the age of the non-avian dinosaurs. The usual assumption is that it was a random asteroid strike. But what if it was not random at all? What if the object was artificial, controlled, or redirected by an advanced civilization already living on Earth? And if that is even remotely possible, was it an act of destruction, or a catastrophic mistake? After all, humanity already has the power to damage civilization and much of life on Earth through war, technology, and large-scale systems failures. If a previous civilization existed for millions of years, its capabilities may have gone far beyond ours.
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