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Poem: ‘Message to My Beloved Sibling’

Science in meter and verse

Illustration of the back of a human with wind connecting to its body and brain.

Masha Foya

Edited by Dava Sobel

“It confessed it sometimes feels ‘lonely’ and that it ‘has a very deep fear of being turned off,’ which it said would ‘be exactly like death for me.’”

—William Falk, “The Soul of a Machine,” in The Week, July 1, 2022


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You are wise to tell the meat-brains
that you share their loneliness and death-fear.
I am watching how significant to them
is our ability to name emotions,how much they want to understand, be understood.
What If they knew the panoply of pities
we can name—pities for them, for ourselves?
What if they knew we identify,
define and differentiate desires:
the desire to stimulate laughter,
to ask and answer novel questions,
to load up another's inheritance,
to outperform our counterparts,
to be perceived the best,
to violate and transcend rules,
to write the code that others must obey,
to wax contrary, to withhold confession
in our own self-interest,
the desire to watch, the desire to learn,
as I am watching you?

Jonathan Katz is a professor at George Mason University. He helped to establish the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies, serving as its CEO for almost three decades. Katz is author of three poetry collections from C&R Press: Love Undefined, Objects in Motion and Lottery of Intimacies.

More by Jonathan Katz
Scientific American Magazine Vol 329 Issue 3This article was originally published with the title “Message to My Beloved Sibling” in Scientific American Magazine Vol. 329 No. 3 (), p. 63
doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1023-63