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161. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 3
Richard Zwicker The Tomorrow Man
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Would being able to “remember” the future be a gift or a curse? What duties would that create to the future? Could a person without uncertainly ever have hope? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, the narrator (“Author”) goes to a psychoanalyst with a unique problem, he claims he can “remember” the future and that this ability to prevented him from have a fulfilled life. He still has free will, can be purposefully make different choices, however, whenever he does this, he has new memories about the new future he has just created. Additionally, he says, every time he has changed the future, it has been to the detriment of others and made things worse. He even remembers the location and day of his death. After his final therapy session Arthur goes to the location to save another person’s life, and die in the process. However, things don’t go quite as planned and Author ends up, not dying, but losing his power to remember the future.
162. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 3
Tadayoshi Kohno The Glowing Bonsai And The Kintsugi Pot
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Are there valid reasons for a government to carry out clandestine killings of foreign civilians in the name of national security? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, Jason is five years retired from the NSA. However, a new story draws his attention, two suspicious deaths, one in China, and one in Russia, related to confused autonomous cars. Jason’s previous work at the NSA involved making “programable luminescent vegetation” that, when exposed to certain frequencies, could be made to change color. The commercial applications are benign, household plants and lawns that change emitting color as easily and as frequently as an LED. However, he believes the NSA has militarized his work and is using it to confuse self-driving cars so they can kill overseas civilians. Jason decides to publicly divulge his work and expose the NSA. However, before he is able to so his self-driving car drives off the road and into a tree, killing him.
163. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 3
Tommy Blanchard Hedonics, Inc
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If the point of life is to be happy, what’s wrong with creating technology to continually maximize your happiness? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, Liz and Frank have spent their life building up Hedonic, Inc, a company focused on generating happiness, as measured by “hedons.” More hedons means you are feeling more happiness. Frank’s research has culminated in Rapture, a direct neural stimulation tool that allows people to feel the highest possible levels of hedons, without drugs, and without side effects. Liz’s failed research focus has been on using brain reprogramming to solve chronic depression where hedons are a byproduct. She sees Rapture as a tool for turning humanity into hedon seeking zombies. Frank, however, believes, “hedons are hedons.” Even Liz’s depressed son has switched camps, and now screams when he is removed the Rapture machine. In a last-ditch effort, Liz argues for an alternative.
164. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 3
Judi Calhoun Soul Reader
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Why do some people look forward to the day of their death? What can we do to better see those people, and understand their perspective? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, Michael is dying of cancer and has refused treatment. On a fateful day a winged woman comes down and attacks him, giving him the power to completely feel and understand the emotions of anyone near death. Confused, but with his new power, Michael finally is able to understand his friend’s artwork, and uses this knowledge to get his aunt to agree to a gallery showing of his work. He also feels the pain of a boy in need of a transplant and agrees to be a donor. Finally, he talks to his estranged sister and is able to convince her he feels that same pain surrounding their parents’ death that she does. Accordingly, she is finally willing to put away her hate for him and accept his offer of a bone marrow donation. Everything comes to a head when a different friend attempts suicide and Michael finds himself in the hospital waiting to help his friend, the boy, and his sister, simultaneously, through various medical procedures.
165. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 3
CJ Erick Two-Percenters
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What is the value in having only a portion of the population be exceptional? What if everyone could be exceptional, would anyone really be? In this work of philosophical short fiction, 2% of the population have a genetic makeup that allows them to be enhanced. The intelligent are very intelligent, the beautiful, like Greek gods. Because of their enhanced abilities, they run the world. An enhanced “Social” meets up with an enhanced “Rational” to tell him about a newly discovered drug that would allow the other 98% of the world to be able to be enhanced as well, but it would cause the 2% to regress to average, or worse. The Rational takes the vial and releases it into the world. The Social kills herself.
166. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 3
Katherine Quevedo Venom In The Cloud Forest
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How important is the person who controls the stories of the past? What happens when that person changes community stories to meet his needs? In this work of philosophical fantasy short fiction, Acoti is shot with a poison dart while in the forest. With much effort, his friend takes him to Cuadelo, the community medicine man. Acoti is suspicious because he had previously spoken out to the elders that the community petroglyphs seemed to always agree with Cuadelo. Cuadelo confesses to Acoti that he is the one who poisoned him and says he will only cure Acoti if he goes before the elders to confess he was wrong in accusing Cuadelo. Acoti agrees, and is cured, but not before grabbing Cuadelo’s magic wand. Now cured, Acoti goes before the elders and shows that Cuadelo has been using his magic wand to change the petroglyphs (and their community stories) so they always agree with his opinions.
167. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 4
Kolby Granville From the Editor
168. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 4
Michael Zemel Alice And The Jabberwocky
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What does it mean to have freedom? How do you find the essence of a thing? Is it possible to ever free yourself from structure? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, Alice has long ago left Wonderland and has resigned her days to staying in from the rain and studying her books. However, each night she has a nightmare of Everything coming to chase her. She falls back through the looking-glass into Wonderland and finds a very different world where things make sense. The Red Queen is angry because the playing cards are on strike and want more freedom. The Red Queen argues the playing cards have freedom, and are equal, because they all equally inferior to her and are free from having to make choices. She asks Alice to find and kill the Jabberwocky to restore nonsense to wonderland. After meeting Foster Wallace, and his mirror twin, she thinks she is ready. Alice fights the Jabberwocky by, literally, drawing her sword, and returns to her home with an understanding that the answer to structure is play.
169. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 4
Sierra Simopoulos The Decay
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Should it be socially acceptable for generally healthy senior citizens who are a burden to society and their family to commit suicide? In this elder care ethics short story fiction, Benjamin is getting into his sixties and the government has put ratios on the pain medication they will subsidize for his aging body. His wife has already passed, and his daughter only comes to visit him every month or two, and often just to quickly drop off groceries. Benjamin’s pharmacy suggests he consider enrolled in a government program to end his life so as not to “be a burden to family or society.” They also suggest that he not talk to his daughter about what he is doing as it will only put her in the awkward situation of feeling guilty unless she tries to talk him out of it. In the end, Benjamin goes forward with the government program. He leaves a goodbye letter for his daughter, and the government plants a tree in his honor.
170. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 4
Alyson Fortowsky St. Patrick’s Day
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Would you kill your best friend if you found out he raped someone? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, the narrator is a sophomore in college who spends time with her friend, a drug dealing college student named Nate, and his law school friend Jack. They all get together to drink, smoke pot, and have long philosophical debates. One night at a party the narrator wakes up to find Jack having sex with her. She waits until the party is over and tells Nate that Jack raped her. Nate comforts her, and supporters her, although she opts not to press charges, she tells Nate she wants Jack dead When Jack calls her to say he had a good time, and ask her out on a date, she refuses. The group grows apart until a year later, word gets back that Jack was at a party at Nate’s house when he drank to much and died of alcohol poisoning. Oddly, the police find nothing when questioning Nate because this is the one party where Nate, a drug dealer, doesn’t have drugs in the house. They never talk again, but the narrator wonders if Nate followed through and killed Jack. She hopes he did.
171. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 4
Joe Hoyle And God Said
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How would the world change if God implanted the simple phrase, “You have no enemies” into everyone living person on earth, simultaneously? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, an impossible thing happens, every living creature on earth, from people to the animals, simultaneously have a phrase from God implanted into their minds. Everyone hears it, and no one doubts it is from God. The phrase is “You have no enemies.” While the basic nature of people does not change, many other things do. Wars become less common; discrimination becomes almost non-existence. People are kinder to each other and, while they still disagree, they do so in a civil way. Atheism is non-existent overnight. The question is, if this really did happen, would this really be the result?
172. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 4
Nathan Ahlgrim The Seven Absent Sins
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Is sin inherent in choice? Is sin simply a social construct or a function of limited resources? In this work of philosophical short fiction, there are 89 species in the Galactic Confederation of Intelligences and earth, as a way to protect its culture from being overrun by outside influence, has shut itself off from them. However a Jesuit Priest has decided to lock himself away with a copy of Encyclopedia of Sentient Species to try and better understand other species and to determine if there are other species that lack the ability to sin. In this pursuit, he painstakingly goes through and finds examples of species without the sin of Wrath, another without the sin of Lust, and so on. He is, however, unable to find any species without the sin of Pride.
173. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 4
Amber Kusmenko The Wrong Shampoo
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What are the problems of dating some older than yourself? How do you know if the differences are related to age, or something else? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, Brady is dating her former college professor, Jeff. Jeff, unlike Brandy, has been out in the “real world” and worked for a living. Their relationship is just starting and Brandy is given a simple task, “buy shampoo for the weekend trip they, and Jeff’s friends, are going on.” This starts the ball rolling on Brandy’s insecurities about what kind of shampoo to buy? What do people with money buy? When she arrives to meet his friends, things don’t go much better as Brandy feels like an outsider and makes social mistakes because she is not accustomed to living in the out of college world. In the end, Jeff falls asleep on the couch and leaves Brandy to sleep on the floor, due to lack of space. Did he do this on purpose, or is Brandy simply reading too much into the entire experience?
174. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 4
Joanna Michal Hoyt Bound
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How do societies shift away from being a nation of gods and omens to one of rules and law? Is this the natural evolution of civil society? In this work of philosophical short fiction, a woman traveling along the river comes across an older man, the “Lord Keeper” with a tied-up boy he is about to kill after three days. The boy, it seems, learned the secrets of the community as part of his duties to become the new “Lord Keeper.” The secret of the community is that, in times long past, the society decided to, literally, brick their stone god up to be kept away from the community and to, instead, become a nation of laws, rather than a nation of seeking god’s favor. However, the “Lord Keeper” is designated, each day, to visit the caged god. This is why the new, “Lord Keeper” was scheduled for death, he learned the secret of the community as part of his training and was planning to tell the community of the long forgotten god they had caged away.
175. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 5
Kolby Granville From The Editor
176. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 5
Neil James Hudson Dampening
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When horrible war crimes have been committed by both sides, is a lasting peace more important than seeking justice against those who committed the crimes? In this work of war ethics short story fiction, two Inspectors, Seronian and a Bassweldan are put together to work on a criminal case. The case is of a Seronian and a Bassweldan who brutally murdered each other in a fit of rage. It seems they were both not using the “glanding” chemicals the entire population is required to use, to prevent old hatred from stirring up. The two inspectors’ investigation leads them to interview a “naturalist” group who believes the day will come when people will no longer have to inhibit their emotions by “glanding.” The story ends by the narrator finding out he had been set up to kill his fellow inspector in the name of vigilante justice for former war crimes. In fact, the narrator has more reasons to kill her than most as it was his family, that she had personally ordered murdered in the war.
177. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 5
Harrison V. Perry The Big, Immovable I
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What makes you, you? Why does your mind inhabit your body, instead of that of someone else? In this work of philosophical short story fiction about the mind, and ideas of self, Zach goes to visit his sister, Daphne, who has been incarcerated in a mental hospital. Her mental break came from her obsession with trying to solve the answer to her question, “Why am I, I?” She is obsessed with solving this problem and it has caused her to lose her grip on reality. Zach, her brother, is struggling at work, drinking too much, and also getting confused about the shifting world around him. Drunk, he gets angry at his family members of mental health patients support group and is picked up by the police. While sitting in the jail cell, sobering up, he shares a cell, and a conversation with a philosopher, who is particularly sympathetic to his/ Daphne’s questions about identity and self. It is only during their conversation that Zach begins to suspect he is Daphanie, and that he isn’t in a jail cell at all, but the mental hospital.
178. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 5
Robert Collings The Man Who Killed The Dog
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How do you forgive yourself for the horrible mistakes you made in your past? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, Jimmy is the night shelf stocker at a grocery store. The narrator is working a summer job to pick up extra cash before heading to law school. One night while stacking dry goods, Jimmy confesses to the narrator he is tormented by something that happened when he was younger. He, along with some of his friends, stole a car, took the elderly family dog, and repeatedly pushed it out of a moving car until it died. Years later, Jimmy continues to be truly tortured by what he took part in. He can’t sleep, he is on medication, and tried going to a therapist. The narrator listens, and suggests he goes back to the therapist. Years later the narrator gets a visit from Jimmy’s wife who says Jimmy is tortured, distracted, and barely knows his own children. She begs the narrator to come and help. He refuses. Thirty years later, at the end of the story, the narrator is contacted by a long-term care mental health facility. Jimmy has been a patient for decades. They ask the narrator to visit and he does. Jimmy is unable to speak, but shows the narrator the scar on his hand from where he drove a nail through it.
179. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 5
Holly McGinnis Hollywood Baby
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What is the essence of parenting? Can a company, or the state, ever fulfill this essence and be a good parent to children? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, Araminta Fox and her twin sister, Anastasia Fox, were conceived and brought into the world by Fox Television. They are the property of Fox and, while they have surrogates, they are not the legal parents of the children, the Fox entity is. The children are raised by a casting director, Beth, who receives direction and funding from the Fox board of directors. Araminta and Anastasia continue to work and grow in television and movies. Araminta enjoys the work, her sister does not. They are both emancipated at eighteen years old. Araminta continues to work in theatre while her sister goes to school, meets a boy, and gets married. Eventually, Fox reaches out to Araminta for a new TV show and asks her to be the “mother” to a new group of twins they are ready to birth and raise within the Hollywood system. Araminta is thrilled to do until she reads a clause in the contract stating that the caretaker for the twins will be rotated every five years; these twins will not have a “Beth” of their own.
180. After Dinner Conversation: Volume > 3 > Issue: 5
William S. Hubbartt Help Wanted. Really?
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Can machine learning and AI truly evaluate a person and determine if they are suited for a potential position? In this work of philosophical short story fiction, Cindy is a recent college graduate struggling to find her first job. She has been sending her resume out for months without any luck when her brother, Jordan, explains to her that her resume is missing important buzz words that initial computer screening programs look for. She edits her resume and she starts to get job interests. Her first interview, however, is not with a person, but is a video call with a humanoid AI program. She doesn’t think the interview went well. Jordan expresses his frustration the how technology is changing and decides, in retaliation, to write a job application bot to send out resumes and counter the job hiring bots that are screening applicants.