The Demi-Urge
This story was published in Amazing Stories , June 1963. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
As if one mystery of creation weren't enough, there was the myth of . . .
By THOMAS M. DISCH
From DIRA IV To Central Colonial Board
There is intelligent life on Earth. After millennia
of lifelessness
, intelligence flourishes here with an extravagance of energy that has been a constant amazement to all the members of the survey team. It multiplies and surges to its fulfillment at an exponential rate. Even within the short period of our visit the Terrans have made significant advances. They have filled their small solar system with their own kind and now they are reaching to the stars.
We can no longer keep the existence of our Empire unknown to them.
And (though it is as incredible as √−1) the Terrans are slaves! Every page of the survey’s report bears witness to it.
Their captors are not alive. They do not, at least, possess the properties of life as it is known throughout the galaxy. They are—as nearly as a poor analogy can suggest—Machines! Machines cannot live, yet here on Earth machinery has reached a level of sophistication—and autonomy—quite unprecedented. Every spark of Terran life has become victim and bondslave of the incredible mechanisms. The noblest enterprises of the race are tarnished by this almost symbiotic relation.
Earth reaches to the stars, but it extends mechanical limbs. Earth ponders the universe, but the thoughts are those of a machine.
The Machines must be destroyed.