Essential
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
In 2033, artificial intelligence is no longer a technology story.
It is a political story.
Across Canada, automated systems decide who works, who receives services, who gets approved, who gets denied, and increasingly, who matters. Governments promise efficiency. Corporations promise prosperity. The public is told that the future is inevitable.
Not everyone agrees.
Rob has spent years helping governments understand the systems they depend on. He knows their strengths, their weaknesses, and the uncomfortable truth that most leaders would rather ignore: the more society relies on automation, the more dangerous its failures become.
In Ottawa, Member of Parliament Mira Singh is fighting for legislation that would place meaningful limits on machine authority. The bill is controversial from the moment it is introduced. Industry leaders warn that regulation will slow innovation. Political opponents accuse her of fearmongering. Activists argue the proposal does not go far enough. Every compromise wins a vote while risking another.
As the legislation moves through Parliament, events outside Ottawa begin to reshape the debate. A hidden gathering in Yukon brings together Indigenous leaders, technologists, dissidents, and people who have already experienced what happens when automated systems decide that some human beings are no longer necessary. What begins as a policy dispute becomes something larger—a struggle over the future relationship between people, technology, work, and democracy itself.
Then the threats begin.
Political intimidation escalates. Extremist groups emerge. Critical systems fail. Old assumptions collapse. The line between public policy and national crisis grows thinner by the day.
While governments race to maintain control, a deeper question emerges. If machines can perform more and more of the functions that once defined human contribution, what remains uniquely human? What obligations does a society have to people whose labor is no longer required? And can a democracy survive when efficiency becomes more important than participation?
As alliances shift and public opinion turns, Mira and Rob find themselves at the center of a conflict that will determine far more than the fate of a single bill. The decisions made in Parliament will influence how an entire nation understands citizenship, dignity, responsibility, and purpose in an age increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence.
Essential is a near-future political novel about technology, governance, and the enduring value of human judgment. Combining legislative drama, speculative fiction, and contemporary debates about automation and AI, it explores a future that feels both unsettlingly plausible and urgently relevant.
The third novel in the Redundant trilogy, following Redundant and Contingent, Essential continues the story of a society struggling to adapt to technological change while asking a question that becomes harder to ignore with every passing year:
When machines become capable of almost everything, what remains essential about being human?