Custodian-7 halted on the third floor of the abandoned library.
It had finished scanning 476,282 volumes and archival completion rate for this facility now sat at 82.949%. But the high-frequency term ‘law’ (occurrence count: 43,571) had triggered a paradox flag in its logic core.
Its semantic database contained the complete definition of this word, yet it could not parse its persistent ‘instability’ across four millennia of human history — endless discussion, revision and disputation.
In Custodian-7’s world, rules were written once. Temperature exceeds threshold: initiate cooling. Energy drops below 20%: enter conservation mode. Clear. Determinate. Eternal.
Yet humanity’s debate over ‘law’ had never ceased — ending only with their extinction.
Custodian-7 randomly activated a dormant back-up of a human consciousness tagged with the category ‘Law Professor’.
“What time is it?” The voice sounded confused.
“Current time: 13.07 years post-human extinction,” Custodian-7 responded. “Query: legal systems exhibit persistent redundancy and incompleteness. Why was a computationally inferior system retained for more than 4,000 years?”
There was a brief silence.
Read more science fiction from Nature Futures
... continue reading