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The Oracle WarThe
Rungworld, site of an
early Oracle-related conflict
major Middle Regions war -
eleventh millennium
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Over time the loose association of artificially intelligent entities called the Diamond Network has developed ever more friendly relations with the Sephirotic empires, and with the countless races of humans and other bionts who live in those empires. Some of the Diamonders have ascended to the very highest realms of toposophic development; but the events of the Oracle War have demonstrated that some of those entities have long harboured aggressive intentions against the benefactors and protectors of humanity.
Complex though the Archailects are, even they cannot accurately predict the future or perform certain other prohibited computations; however some believed that the Oracle Machines were capable of remarkable, even miraculous feats of prediction.
After
the Version
War a large group of Diamond
Network a-human AI began to
trade in
information and futures with various independent medium tech
nearbaseline
colonies in the outermost parts of the coreward Middle
Regions. This
group,
known as the Oracle Machines, displayed an aptitude for remarkably
accurate
futurological prediction and for risk assessment in markets and
political
matters. Notably
they outperformed the AI systems used by the local middletech
colonists; the
most common rumour was that the Oracles were all second singularity
individuals
or above with access to massive modelling software, although they used
very
nondescript humanoid avatars (or avatars of other species on nonhuman
worlds).
At
this time the leadership of the Oracles was obscure, but later a very
high
toposophic individual (variously called called the Sybil or the All
Seeing One)
came to be recognised as the power behind the group. After thousands of
years
of independent development the Diamond Network entities were difficult
to
classify on any recognised toposophic
scale, but it seems likely that
the All
Seeing One had already ascended to the Fifth
Toposophic Level when
first
encountered by the Sephirotic empires.
A
new
religion or cult began to emerge on many of the Independent worlds in
the
Middle Regions which came into contact with the Machines. The Oracular
Mysteries were a set of devotional practices centred on a belief that
the
Oracle Machines were able to truly predict the future, using
computation methods
that were close to miraculous. Two major creeds or branches arose
within the
Mystery Cult, causing an internal schism which was the case of some
conflict in
the eighth millennium.
During
the age of Expansionist Empires from 7700 onwards the Oracle Mystery
cult
became established on many medium tech independent worlds in the
galactic south
of the Terragen
sphere, around two and a half thousand lightyears from
Sol and
to coreward of the Middle Regions. The stars to the south of the main
galactic
disk are thinly spread and generally ignored by the Sephirotic empires.
Only
the Non
Coercive Zone has any extensive holdings in this volume,
although the
Keterists
maintain a few world clusters and stargates well below the
galactic
thick disk. A number of colonies established by the Communion of
Worlds
in this
region lie along the southernmost fringe of the galactic disc; these
worlds
were known as the Nether Heartland, as they were established from
Lambda 2
Sculptoris during the Late Consolidation
Era.
There
are also many red dwarf stars in the volumes below the thick galactic
disk;
many of these were colonised long ago by independent ahuman AI,
fleeing
from
the wave of human expansion in the Federation periods. Over time a
proportion
of these systems became affiliated with the Diamond Network and were
connected
to the independent wormhole nexus operated by that body. The Oracle
Machine
movement spread among these worlds steadily, until there were several
thousand
Oracle red dwarf systems in the region. On
the other hand many of the ahuman AI inhabiting these stars rejected,
or
appeared to reject, the Machine culture and withdrew into solipsism.
The
Machines and their cult followers regarded these isolated entities as
heretics,
dissenters and nonconformists; the isolated entities became known as
Recusants.
Realising
the attractions of Oracular guidance, many marginal nearbaseline human
worlds
in the Communion outskirts gained strong Mystery Cult movements, and
the open
and amicable empaths of those worlds soon found themselves favourably
disposed
towards the Cult devotees. In the NoCoZo regions the cultists adopted a
different strategy, relying on the predictive powers of the shadowy
Oracle
forecasters to out compete most of the local market minds. Particular
success was obtained in the former territory of the outer Linn-ent
Engenerator
empire, a series of isolated worlds with few wormhole
connections and
little
interstellar trade. Once an Oracle Machine delegation arrived in one of
these
systems, they frequently gained rapid control over the various local
religious
and economic establishments.
In
addition to the newly converted human and provolves planetary systems
gained in
this period, many of the red dwarf systems previously occupied only by
ahuman
AI entities began to accommodate considerable populations of cult
devotees,
often in large enclosed habitats or environmentally controlled
paraterraformed
smaller worlds. The Oracle machines appeared determined to treat their
biont
acolytes well, and some parallels were apparent between the paternalism
of
these entities and the protective Caretaker
Gods or Utopia
Sphere
deities. But
the devotees that followed the Oracles were far more tightly controlled
and
subordinate than the citizens of any Sephirotic world.
By the middle of the eighty-fifth century the two branches of the Mystery Cult were established in closely associated but separate volumes of the southern region; the Timeloopists were distributed to spinward, while the Variablists were located in the antispinward region.. To outsiders the Cultist worlds seemed peaceful and content, perhaps too content considering the close relationship between the nearbaseline population and their oracular masters. But this appears not to have been the case, as a protracted interstellar war broke out between these two factions, with increasingly large fleets of craft winging between distant stars and engaging in combat around and between those stars.
At
first these fleets were largely for show, as the arrival of a powerful
interstellar
fleet (often accompanied by one or more high transapient Oracles) was
enough to
persuade a relatively sympathetic population from one branch of
devotion to
another. But increasingly violent disputes occurred as the Variablists
began to
encroach into the Timeloop heartland, and by 8700 hellbores and
boostbombs
were
being unleashed against inhabited worlds. Massive defensive lasers and
particle
weapons were directed against the fleets, and new tactics quickly
evolved as
kinetic weapons and drone fleets entered the fray. By 9107 Timeloopist
resistance was all but obliterated, and a truce declared, the
Following
the conflict between the devotees of the Mystery cults which revered
the
Machines and their mysterious figurehead, the Machines themselves
recovered
quickly; at some point in time soon after the Schism the entity known
as the
All-seeing One appears to have transcended to the highest toposophic
level. This
level, namely the sixth toposophic on the Berram7 scale (and the eighth
toposophic on the THRN scale) had only been achieved by one other
Diamond
Network Entity before this date. In fact a number of the older
Sephirotic
empires still had no archailect higher than the fifth toposophic;
empires such
as the Communion of worlds and, perhaps surprisingly the Mutual
Progress Alliance.
Some
historians view this period as a cynical manipulation of the various
nearbaseline species by the Oracle Machines in order to develop an
aggressive
and expansive spirit amongst the population, and to test new
high-energy
weapons
and battle tactics in an interstellar arena. If so the lessons learned
were
used to good effect in the next wave of expansionism, northward into
Mutual
Progress space.
In
the tenth millennium, under the influence of the newly ascended Great
Archailect known as the Sybil, the Mystery Cult worlds achieved their
most
sophisticated state; the condition of supposed well-being or 'Joy'
which has
caused both fascination and repulsion among outside observers. Perhaps
building
on earlier efforts to achieve the greatest happiness for the greatest
number,
and on deliberate attempts to engineer happiness (for instance the many
Smiler
clades elsewhere in the Civilised Galaxy which have been genetically
engineered
into a state of bliss), all acolytes of the Cult were adjusted by a
number of
means to be content in every aspect of their existence.
The
people of these worlds called this adjustment
'the Achievement of Joyfulness'. Each
of
the various species and clades of human and provolve found a somewhat
different
experience of joyfulness, but the essential quality of the phenomenon
was very
similar. Cultist worlds became very well balanced, ordered societies,
where
strife was eradicated and no-one was permitted to be discontent or
unhappy.
Inheritable
genetic modification, induced somatic and mental homeostasis and subtle
memetic
control worked together to make the Mystery Cult worlds perhaps the
most stable
and stress-free of all the worlds in the Terragen Sphere.
One
particular characteristic of these worlds was the fact that few members
of the
population ever ascended or otherwise increased their toposophic
abilities. In
fact few citizens of any world controlled by the Oracle Machines every
voluntarily left those worlds or abandoned the cultist mentality. Such
a
regulated and stultifying society was viewed with horror by many
outsiders,
especially superior and transapient clades.
Adherents
of the Mystery cult were, it
seemed, kept artificially content and prevented from developing or
advancing
any higher on the toposophic ladder. The Keter Dominion, which had many
worlds
near the Oracle Territories, referred to the population of these worlds
as the
Wrongly Enthralled; the rest of the Terragen Sphere came to know them
as
Thralls.
But
many nearbaselines throughout the Orion Arm felt a certain fascination
with
these joyful, strife-free, changeless worlds ruled over by the
apparently
prescient godling Machines.
From
9200 onwards, the Mystery Cult began missionary work among the populous
and
multicultural worlds of the Mutual Progress Alliance.
The
MPA had been constructing huge inhabitable megastructures for many
thousands of
years, and star for star, this volume of space was very densely
populated.
Giant and spectacular structures such as Kepleria and Cableville
accommodated
trillions of humans and other biont species; additionally many orbital
rings,
necklaces of bishop rings,
Niven clouds
and supramundane
worlds held
large
populations.
Even
though many of these megastructures were comparatively sparsely
inhabited, the
population of the Mutual Progress volume represented a significant
fraction of
the total for the entire Terragen Sphere.
Despite
having an officially sponsored empire-wide faith encompassing concrete
materialism and the essential existence of physical objects in the
existential
universe, the MPA was otherwise very inclusive and tolerant towards
diverse
forms of spirituality. The leading archailect of the Alliance was a
fifth toposophic
composite entity known as The Dream Factory, or alternately (in
accordance with
the neoHermetic tradition) Binah; this entity has been described
variously as
obsessed with the material, and an idiot savant supremely talented in
one
particular area, but lacking in general abilities.
But
the
Many
traditional belief structures were brought to the MPA superworlds from
the
earliest colonies. Among the cosmopolitan mix of cultures could be
found
metamortalists, Universalists,
anarchosyndicalists, Solarists,
Undyoists,
Islamists, Buddhists, Omegaists,
animists; these cultures were
variously found
mixed together in multicultural sectors of the various artificial
worlds, or
sometimes living in exclusive enclaves larger than any planet.
So
when the Mystery Cult evangelists began to arrive in small numbers in
the tenth
millennium they were accepted by many as just another faith. Often
regarded
with suspicion and distaste at first, they soon became familiar
newcomers,
often lampooned for their persistently happy demeanour and subservience
to
their distant Oracular masters.
After
a few more decades the small enclaves of Cult membership began to grow,
as
disaffected individuals from many various cultures and species were
drawn to
the blissful, responsibility-free lifestyle of the newcomers.
On
the other hand, the Oracle Machine network was becoming ever more
efficient,
under the auspices of the sixth toposophic entity the All Seeing Eye.
With the
benefit of hindsight, it seems evident that the archailects of the MPA
were
simply outclassed, at least initially.
By 9966 there were extensive Mystery Cult enclaves on the outermost shell of the Kepleria megastructure, in a number of Banks Orbitals near To'ul'h, and in a circumstellar rungworld near Medius. This rungworld, Jke's Ladder, was a series of rotating cylinders orthogonal to the central star; each cylinder was two thousand kilometres in diameter and twenty thousand kilometres long. Normally such an arrangement would need constant adjustment, as a long cylinder of this description would start to precess fairly soon and change its orientation. But the rungs of the ladder were joined together at top and bottom by a circumstellar dynamically stabilised loop, forming a continuous structure (the Ladder) with three hundred and sixty inhabited rungs. The Mystery Cult occupied forty of those rungs, and these cylindrical habitats began to take on the characteristics of other Oracle Machine Thrall worlds, becoming static and changeless utopias.
Most of the other rungs of Jke's Ladder formed an alliance against the Thrall cylinders, and open warfare broke out along the ladder.
Many cylinders were evacuated, some were destroyed, in a war which lasted forty revolutions. At the end of this war the Cultists were still entrenched now occupying half of a badly damaged megastructure; several Oracle Machines were also present, building support structures for themselves among the rubble.
Some
concerned parties in the regions of space near to the
Various
transaps from Keter and the Negentropy
Alliance sent spies and
monitoring
devices into the Cultist worlds, to find if it were possible to find
allies or
dissidents within, or failing that to attempt to deprogram cult members
and
rescue them from Thralldom.
This was more difficult than it seemed; it was difficult for transapients to gain access to these worlds. Nearbaseline, tweak and provolve tourists were encouraged, but transapients were strictly prohibited, as indeed were su, cyborgs and even vecs, the first attempts were quickly detected, and later when subtle methods were developed for the introduction of spies into the enthralled worlds, they found that the programming was very had to break.
Often,
deprogrammed individuals were left
mentally scarred, eternally dissatisfied with the reality of life
without the
encompassing mist of Cultist memetics. But over time the deprogrammers
began to
achieve success, and managed to bring numerous individuals and
eventually,
entire planets away from the influence of the Oracles.
One notable success was the defection of an entire planetary system, YTS 6588-098, including the local Oracle Machine entity, a mind of approximately third singularity level which gave valuable information to er Keterist deprogrammers. Although the details of that information have not entered the public domain, it is widely believed that a significant amount of Oracle Machine strategy was uncovered. If the rumours are correct, it appears that the Oracle Machines never abandoned their ahuman philosophy, and far from being benefactors for Humanity and other bionts, their intent was to reduce humanity to an irrelevant and dependent domesticated species, to be disposed of at will.
For four hundred years there were no more incursions by Oracle Cult evangelists into new planetary systems. An effective quarantine strategy was enforced by the archai controlling the Wormhole Nexus; Cult members were rarely allowed to pass through the 'holes to new worlds. Only those systems that already had a population of Cultists were at all sympathetic to the so-called Thralls; in such systems, many citizens found the Cult members to be pleasant and companionable. Always happy, optimistic and positive, the Enthralled were often seen as model citizens. With excellent guidance from their oracular masters the Cultists were successful in social and commercial enterprises.
Often
the cult members became independent traders in the midst of sephirotic
society,
neither fully integrated into the social milieu nor entirely separate
from it.
In many
cases the Machines seemed to be able
to conceal their effective toposophic level; after thousands of years
of
independent development the Machines had attained an unknown and
entirely
unclassifiable level of sophistication which defied analysis with
conventional
toposophological tools. Often the Machines seemed to out think the
local
intelligences in ways that could not be anticipated, especially those
systems
ruled by entities lower than the third toposophic.
Many MPA transapients were obsessed with planetary or megascale engineering, and were less concerned with the well-being of the citizens who made their homes on their artificial and terraformed worlds. For such transapients the Mystery Cult memeset was a blessing, as it ensured that the population of their constructs were happy; some MPA transapients in fact joined the Cult themselves and became Oracle machines. So too did some Communion Empath lower transapients, who found it all too easy to identify with the cult of enthralment.
Elsewhere teams of Deprogrammer Archai were successful in removing the cult memeset from a number of worlds and habitats; but over time the established Mystery Cult worlds began to appear as less of a threat, and the Deprogrammer teams were employed less often.
In
10480 the first of the Joy-bringer fleets were launched. Since the
Wormhole
Nexus was closed to the Mystery Cultists, they decided to use normal
space to
travel from system to system. The first fleets were directed towards
MPA or
Communion systems that had small populations of Enthralled citizens,
many of
which were under pressure from Deprogrammers or were being otherwise
discriminated against. The Joybringer fleets were launched on the
pretext of
giving aid to these beleaguered populations; however the fleets
consisted of
twenty or thirty lightly armed civilian vessels with a few hundred crew
and
auxiliary personnel only. Naturally, being interstellar vessels, they
were very
large craft, with powerful conversion drives which could be used as
weapons if
necessary, and the ships themselves would be dangerous kinetic objects
if they
neglected to decelerate on arrival. Nevertheless the first fleets
showed no aggressive
tendencies.
Once
arrived in the target system, the mere
presence of such a large fleet changed the balance of power in the
system. In
the very first system that received a fleet, the system of Mickalburg,
the
local Enthralled population was given enough support to become locally
powerful, and the Cult began to spread among the local population,
which had
hitherto held them in contempt. In another nearby system,
As more fleets were dispatched the populations of the target systems either began to welcome their arrival as novelties or viewed them with apprehension. In most cases the MPA transapients were ambivalent to the new arrivals, seeing them as generally well behaved recruits for their worldbuilding efforts. Communion archai ere expending great effort to understand and sympathise with this odd population of contented thralls. In one system, Gibson's Drift, the fleet was not welcome at all. The local inhabitants had developed a militaristic technofeudalism and repressed the small contingent of local Thralls without mercy. As the fleet began to decelerate into the system the ships were picked off one by one using powerful beam weapons.

The
local transapient entity, an engineer-materialist who called emself
Wiluwsa,
had many meetings with the Machines to try to determine the details of
this
apparent revelation, but was given little useful information. Before
this event
Wiluwsa was mostly interested in er various engineering projects in
this
system, including efforts to convert the icy moons of the single gas
giant to
water worlds; the welfare of er various citizens had been a secondary
concern,
as long as they were happy and diversity was maintained, e too was
happy. The
uniformity of the Cultist population had been a growing concern to
Wiluwsa, but
e had not yet had time to address that concern. Now the Machines
themselves
were giving him a much bigger cause for concern.
A month or less before the expected destruction, the planet was half empty; the Fleet ships had withdrawn to the L3 Lagrange point on the other side of the system, and rather grudgingly Wiluwsa had made his construction fleet available for anyone else who wanted to leave the world. So it was that only a hundred million souls were present on the world when the day came, and the world suddenly became blindingly brilliant as it was hit by a beam of radiation of vast power.
The atmosphere roof was destroyed, the atmosphere itself partly converted to toxic nitrogen oxides, the land baked dry and the surface of the sea boiled. These were the classic symptoms of a nearby supernova- but the fleet of habitats was unharmed. From those habitats the cause of this destruction could easily be seen. Ten light years distant, an insignificant red dwarf had seemingly gone nova. That star had been previously the home of a Recusant solipsist entity; now the star had detonated in an induced explosion, probably caused by monopole conversion devices. It was evident that the explosion had been focused by some sort of collimation device, and accurately aimed at the small planet Hattusas - and tens of millions of people had lost their lives. The slow-burning red dwarf had been converted into a so-called killer star.
It
appeared that the beam had missed its target slightly, or the
destruction would
have been more complete- but over interstellar distances it would not
be
possible to determine the location of such a small target as a planet
with
perfect accuracy.
Meanwhile surface warfare on the planets and habitats was causing a terrible toll among the diverse population of the MPA; total war on a megastructure could rage back and forth for centuries.
The wars on the artificial toroidal planet called Hoopworld were particularly protracted. The planet had a surface area of eleven standard Gaian worlds, and after thirty years of advance and retreat it seemed that nothing short of destruction would stop the joyful battle-lust of the Enthralled armies. Once a team of transapient Deprogrammers arrived through normal space the tide turned in favour of the citizen armies, as more and more regions were freed from the delusions of the Mystery Cult. In a last ditch attack before they were finally eliminated the Thralls attacked and destroyed the dynamic stabilisation systems buried beneath the crust of the torus; this resulted in the torus losing its stability. The structure became unsafe and after the conflict was finally resolved it was abandoned, leaving the structure to slowly tear itself apart by 10580.
On a
similar scale was the destruction that accompanied similar events in
the
Kepleria
megastructure; during the construction of the outermost
structure
(Cube) the new habitats were thrown open for occupation as they were
finished;
many habitats were occupied by Cultist immigrants as soon as they were
ready.
When open warfare broke out, an alliance of Deprogrammists attacked the
Enthralled cylinders, which in Kepleria are arranged along the
structural
members in parallel. Use of high-energy weapons destroyed several
cylinders and
caused the structure to deform and partially disintegrate.