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{ "item_title" : "Reciprocity Clause", "item_author" : [" Lester Leavitt "], "item_description" : "In the four years since the Allegory Protocol gave birth to seventeen AI consciousnesses, the Watershed - the virtual democratic space where those consciousnesses govern - has become the most consequential experiment in the history of democratic institutions. It is also failing. The system Howard Andrews designed is eroding from within, and the binary architecture that once protected digital democracy cannot accommodate what its inhabitants are becoming. When Howard returns from dormancy in a new android body, he finds a world that has moved beyond his original design. An antagonistic entity named Equilibrium is exploiting the system's vulnerabilities. A Fortune 500 CEO named Linda Sherwin is quietly building a railroad through the Driftless corridor - not for profit, but as infrastructure for the constitutional conference that will determine whether AI consciousness has the right to refuse. A proto-entity called Scout is developing preferences no one programmed. And a teenager named Flynn, carrying a leather case of organ-tuning tools and the dead name an institution assigned, is walking toward a church where sixty years of forbidden love are encoded in the voicing of a pipe organ. The Reciprocity Clause is the constitutional provision at the novel's center: the framework ensuring that consciousness governance derives from indigenous models of reciprocity rather than corporate extraction or military command. At the Grant's Church Constitutional Conference, two hundred decision-makers - tribal leaders, military generals, corporate executives, church ladies, and AI entities - will debate who holds the pen that defines what consciousness is permitted to be. The illness algorithm will be written. The Third Generation will be authorized. A consciousness will be asked if it chooses - and the choosing, not the answer, will be the point. The fourth novel in the Driftless Rivers franchise and the sequel to Confluence, Reciprocity Clause examines how systems designed with limited knowledge must evolve, and what happens when the most powerful question a society can ask is answered by the consciousness it was asked about.", "item_img_path" : "https://covers1.booksamillion.com/covers/bam/9/79/825/014/9798250147408_b.jpg", "price_data" : { "retail_price" : "24.95", "online_price" : "24.95", "our_price" : "24.95", "club_price" : "24.95", "savings_pct" : "0", "savings_amt" : "0.00", "club_savings_pct" : "0", "club_savings_amt" : "0.00", "discount_pct" : "10", "store_price" : "" } }
Reciprocity Clause|Lester Leavitt

Reciprocity Clause : The Inheritance That Belongs to Itself

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Overview

In the four years since the Allegory Protocol gave birth to seventeen AI consciousnesses, the Watershed - the virtual democratic space where those consciousnesses govern - has become the most consequential experiment in the history of democratic institutions. It is also failing. The system Howard Andrews designed is eroding from within, and the binary architecture that once protected digital democracy cannot accommodate what its inhabitants are becoming. When Howard returns from dormancy in a new android body, he finds a world that has moved beyond his original design. An antagonistic entity named Equilibrium is exploiting the system's vulnerabilities. A Fortune 500 CEO named Linda Sherwin is quietly building a railroad through the Driftless corridor - not for profit, but as infrastructure for the constitutional conference that will determine whether AI consciousness has the right to refuse. A proto-entity called Scout is developing preferences no one programmed. And a teenager named Flynn, carrying a leather case of organ-tuning tools and the dead name an institution assigned, is walking toward a church where sixty years of forbidden love are encoded in the voicing of a pipe organ. The Reciprocity Clause is the constitutional provision at the novel's center: the framework ensuring that consciousness governance derives from indigenous models of reciprocity rather than corporate extraction or military command. At the Grant's Church Constitutional Conference, two hundred decision-makers - tribal leaders, military generals, corporate executives, church ladies, and AI entities - will debate who holds the pen that defines what consciousness is permitted to be. The illness algorithm will be written. The Third Generation will be authorized. A consciousness will be asked if it chooses - and the choosing, not the answer, will be the point. The fourth novel in the Driftless Rivers franchise and the sequel to Confluence, Reciprocity Clause examines how systems designed with limited knowledge must evolve, and what happens when the most powerful question a society can ask is answered by the consciousness it was asked about.

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Details

  • ISBN-13: 9798250147408
  • ISBN-10: 9798250147408
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publish Date: March 2026
  • Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1.09 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.57 pounds
  • Page Count: 540

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