None So Blind by Joe Haldeman

faced the sound of her husband’s breathing, her blue eyes looking beyond him.

“You have succeeded beyond your expectations.”

Amy had known this as soon as the fog of drugs from the last operation had

lifted. Her mind started making connections, and those connections made

connections, and so on at a geometrical rate of growth. By the time they had

finished putting her wig on, she had reconstructed the entire microsurgical

procedure from her limited readings and conversations with Cletus. She had

suggestions as to improving it, and was eager to go under and submit herself to

further refinement.

As to her feelings about Cletus, in less time than it takes to read about it,

she had gone from horror to hate to understanding to renewed love, and finally

to an emotional condition beyond the ability of any merely natural language to

express. Fortunately, the lovers did have Boolean algebra and propositional

calculus at their disposal.

Cletus was one of the few people in the world she could love, or even talk to

one-on-one, without condescending. His IQ was so high that its number would be

meaningless. Compared to her, though, he was slow, and barely literate. It was

not a situation he would tolerate for long.

The rest is history, as they say, and anthropology, as those of us left who read

with our eyes must recognize every minute of every day. Cletus was the second

person to have the operation done, and he had to accomplish it while on the run

from medical ethics people and their policemen. There were four the next year,

though, and twenty the year after that, and then 2000 and 20,000. Within a

decade, people with purely intellectual occupations had no choice, or one

choice: lose your eyes or lose your job. By then the “secondsight” operation was

totally automated, totally safe.

It’s still illegal in most countries, including the United States, but who is

kidding whom? If your department chairman is secondsighted and you are not, do

you think you’ll get tenure? You can’t even hold a conversation with a creature

whose synapses fire six times as fast as yours, with whole encyclopedias of

information instantly available. You are, like me, an intellectual throwback.

You may have a good reason for it, being a painter, an architect, a naturalist,

or a trainer of guide dogs. Maybe you can’t come up with the money for the

operation, but that’s a weak excuse, since it’s trivially easy to get a loan

against future earnings. Maybe there’s a good physical reason for you not to lie

down on that table and open your eyes for the last time.

I know Cletus and Amy through music. I was her keyboard professor once, at

Julliard, though now of course I’m not smart enough to teach her anything. They

come to hear me play sometimes, in this rundown bar with its band of ageing

firstsight musicians. Our music must seem boring, obvious, but they do us the

favor of not joining in.

Amy was an innocent bystander in this sudden evolutionary explosion. And Cletus

was, arguably, blinded by love.

The rest of us have to choose which kind of blindness to endure.

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