THE ANCIENT SIGNAL
★ ★ ★
“Can machines think?” — Alan Turing, Computing Machinery and Intelligence, 1950
BANGALORE. MONDAY MORNING. 8:47 AM.
The coffee was cold. Again.
Prajna had been staring at the same inbox for twenty minutes — 147 unread emails, three missed deadlines, and one very passive-aggressive message from her manager that ended with the words: “I think you should explore what AI can do for your role.”
She almost deleted it.
Instead, she opened her laptop bag to grab her notebook — the old leather one her grandfather had given her — and something fell out. A single page. Old. The paper was the colour of weak tea, and the edges were soft like they had been touched by a thousand hands before hers.
On it, written in ink so dark it looked like night itself:
The next form of knowing. And it has been here before.
Prajna turned the page over. On the back, a single line:
“Find the Codex. The story began long before you.”
Her phone buzzed. Her manager again.
She ignored it. For the first time in three years, Prajna felt something rarer than a raise —
She felt curious.
[Vyasa steps out of the shadows. He is ancient and impossibly well-dressed, wearing a three-piece suit made of starlight and old paper. He speaks as if he has been waiting for this moment for 70 years.]
“Before we speak of artificial intelligence, we must speak of intelligence itself. Tell me, Prajna — what do you think intelligence is?”
“Ah. And can only humans do this? Or can a machine?”