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    The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary


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      The Man

      Who Ended History:

      A Documentary

      Ken Liu

      [Dr. Kirino is in her early forties. She has the kind of beauty that doesn't

      require much makeup . If you look closely, you can see bits of white in her

      otherwise black hair.]

      Akemi Kirino, Chief Scientist, Feynman Laboratories:

      Every night, when you stand outside and gaze upon the stars, you

      are bathing in time as well as light .

      For example, when you look at this star in the constellation Libra

      called Gliese 581, you are really seeing it as it was just over two decades

      ago because it's about twenty light years from us. And conversely, if

      someone around Gliese 581 had a powerful enough telescope pointed

      to around here right now, they'd be able to see Evan and me walking

      around Harvard Yard, back when we were graduate students.

      [She points to Massachusetts on the globe on her desk, as the camera pans

      to zoom in on it. She pauses, thinking over her words . The camera pulls

      back, moving us further and further away from the globe, as though we

      were flying away from it.]

      The best telescopes we have today can see as far back as about 13

      billion years ago. If you strap one of those to a rocket moving away

      from the Earth at a speed that's faster than light —a detail that I'll get

      to in a minute —and point the telescope back at the Earth, you'll see

      the history of humanity unfold before you in reverse . The view of

      everything that has happened on Earth leaves here in an ever -expanding sphere of light . And you only have to control how far away

      you travel in space to determine how far back you'll go in time.

      [The camera keeps on pulling back, through the door of her office, down the

      hall, as the globe and Dr. Kirino become smaller and smaller in our view .

      The long hallway we are backing down is dark, and in that sea of darkness,

      the open door of the office becomes a rectangle of bright light framing the

      globe and the woman.]

      Somewhere about here you'll wit ness Prince Charles's sad face as

      Hong Kong is finally returned to China. Somewhere about here you'll

      see Japan's surrender aboard the USS Missouri. Somewhere about here

      you'll see Hideyoshi's troops set foot on the soil of Korea for the first

      time. And so mewhere about here you'll see Lady Murasaki completing

      the first chapter of the Tale of Genji . If you keep on going, you can go

      back to the beginning of civilization and beyond.

      But the past is consumed even as it is seen. The photons enter the

      lens, and f rom there they strike an imaging surface, be it your retina or

      a sheet of film or a digital sensor, and then they are gone, stopped dead

      in their paths. If you look but don't pay attention and miss a moment,

      you cannot travel further out to catch it again . That moment is erased

      from the universe, forever.

      [From the shadows next to the door to the office an arm reaches out to slam

      the door shut. Darkness swallows Dr. Kirino, the globe, and the bright

      rectangle of light. The screen stays black for a few seconds before the

      opening credits roll.]

      Remembrance Films HK Ltd.

      in association with

      Yurushi Studios

      presents

      a Heraclitus Twice Production

      THE MAN WHO ENDED HISTORY

      This film has been banned by the Ministry of

      Culture of the People's Republic of China and is

      released under strong protest from the government

      of Japan

      [We are back in the warm glow of her office.]

      Akemi Kirino:

      Because we have not yet solved the problem of how to travel faster

      than light, there is no real way for us to actually get a telescope out

      there to see the past . But we've found a way to cheat.

      Theorists long suspected that at each moment, the world around

      us is literally exploding with newly created subatomic particles of a

      certain type, now known as Bohm - Kirino particles. My modest

      contribution to physics was to confirm their existence and to discover

      that these particles always come in pairs . One member of the pair

      shoots away from the Earth, riding the photon that gave it birth and

      traveling at the speed of light. The other remains behind, oscillating in

      the vicinity of its creation.

      The pairs of Bohm-Kirino particles are under quantum

      entanglement. This means that they are bound together in such a way

      that no matter how far apart they are from each other physically, their

      propert ies are linked together as though they are but aspects of a single

      system . If you take a measurement on one member of the pair, thereby

      collapsing the wave function, you would immediately know the state of

      the other member of the pair, even if it is light years away.

      Since the energy levels of Bohm- Kirino particles decay at a known

      rate, by tuning the sensitivity of the detection field, we can attempt to

      capture and measure Bohm - Kirino particles of a precise age created in

      a specific place.

      When a measurement is taken on the local Bohm-Kirino particle

      in an entangled pair, it is equivalent to taking a measurement on that

      particle's entangled twin, which, along with its host photon, may be

      trillions of miles away, and thus, decades in the past . Through some

      complex but standard mathematics, the measurement allows us to

      calculate and infer the state of the host photon . But, like any

      measurement performed on entangled pairs, the measurement can be

      taken only once, and the information is then gone foreve r.

      In other words, it is as though we have found a way to place a

      telescope as far away from the Earth, and as far back in time, as we

      like . If you want, you can look back on the day you were married, your

      first kiss, the moment you were born. But for each moment in the past,

      we get only one chance to look.

      [The camera shows an idle factory on the outskirts of the city of Harbin,

      Heilongjiang Province, China. It looks just like any other factory in the

      industrial heartland of China in the grip of another downturn in the

      country's merciless boom- and- bust cycles: ramshackle, silent, dusty, the

      windows and doors shuttered and boarded up. Samantha Paine, the

      correspondent, wears a wool cap and scarf . Her cheeks are bright red with

      the cold, and her eyes are tired. As she speaks in her calm voice, the

      condensation from her breath curls and lingers before her face.]

      Archival Footage: September 18, 20XX. Courtesy of APAC Broadcasting

      Corporation

      Samantha

      We are in Pingfang District, on the outskirts of Harbin. Although

      : On this day, back in 1931, the first shots in the Second

      Sino- Japanese War were fired near Shenyang, here in Manchuria. For

      the Chinese, that was the beginning of World War Two, more than a

      decade before the United States
    would be involved.

      the name “ Pingfang” means nothing to most people in the West, some

      have called Pingfang the Asian Auschwitz. Here, Unit 731 of the

      Japanese Imperial Army performed gruesome experiments on

      thousands of Chinese and Allied prisoners throughout the war as part

      of Japan's effort to develop biological weapons and to conduct research

      into the limits of human endurance .

      On these premises, Japanese army doctors directly killed

      thousands of Chinese and Allied prisoners through medical and

      weapons experiments, vivisections, amputations, and other systematic

      methods of torture. At the end of the War, the retreating Japanese

      army killed all remaining prisoners and burned the complex to the

      ground, leaving behind only the shell of the administrative building

      and some pits used to breed disease - carrying rats. There were no

      survivors.

      Historians estimate that between 200,000 and half a million

      Chinese persons, almost all civilians, were killed by the biological and

      chemical weapons researched and developed in this place and other

      satellite labs: anthrax, cholera, the bubonic plague . At the end of the

      War, General MacArthur, supreme commander of the Allied forces,

      granted all members of Unit 731 immunity from war crimes

      prosecution in order to get the data from their experiments and to

      keep the data away from the Soviet Union.

      Today, except for a small museum nearby with few visitors, little

      evidence of those atrocities is visible . Over there, at the edge of an

      empty field, a pile of rubble stands where the incinerator for destroy ing

      the bodies of the victims used to be . This factory behind me is built on

      the foundation of a storage depot used by Unit 731 for germ - breeding

      supplies. Until the recent economic downturn, which shuttered its

      doors, the factory built moped engines for a Sino - Japanese joint

      venture in Harbin . And in a gruesome echo of the past, several

      pharmaceutical companies have quietly settled in around the site of

      Unit 731's former headquarters.

      Perhaps the Chinese are content to leave behind this part of their

      past and move on. And if they do, the rest of the world will probably

      move on as well.

      But not if Evan Wei has anything to say about it.

      [Samantha speaks over a montage of images of Evan Wei lecturing in front

      of a classroom and posing before complex machiner y with Dr. Kirino . In

      the photographs they look to be in their twenties.]

      Dr. Evan Wei, a Chinese- American historian specializing in

      Classical Japan, is determined to make the world focus on the suffering

      of the victims of Unit 731 . He and his wife, Dr. Akemi Kirino, a noted

      Japanese- American experimental physicist, have developed a

      controversial technique that they claim will allow people to travel back

      in time and experience history as it occurred . Today, he will publicly

      demonstrate his technique by traveling back to the year 1940, at the

      height of Unit 731's activities, and personally bear witness to the

      atrocities of Unit 731.

      The Japanese government claims that China is engaged in a

      propaganda stunt, and it has filed a strongly- worded protest with

      Beijing for allowing this demonstration . Citing principles of

      international law, Japan argues that China does not have the right to

      sponsor an expedition into World War Two - era Harbin because

      Harbin was then under the control of Manchukuo, a puppet regime of

      t he Japanese Empire. China has rejected the Japanese claim, and

      responded by declaring Dr. Wei's demonstration an “ excavation of

      national heritage” and now claims ownership rights over any visual or

      audio record of Dr. Wei's proposed journey to the past under Chinese

      antiquities-export laws.

      Dr. Wei has insisted that he and his wife are conducting this

      experiment in their capacities as individual American citizens, with no

      connection to any government . They have asked the American Consul

      General in nearby Shenyang, as well as representatives of the United

      Nations, to intervene and protect their effort from any governmental

      interference . It's unclear how this legal mess will be resolved.

      Meanwhile, numerous groups from China and overseas, some in

      support of Dr. Wei, some against, have gathered to hold protests .

      China has mobilized thousands of riot police to keep these

      demonstrators from approaching Pingfang.

      Stay tuned, and we will bring you up - to - date reports on this

      historical occasion. This is Samantha Paine, for APAC.

      To truly travel back in time, we still had to jump over one more

      hurdle.

      Akemi Kirino:

      The Bohm- Kirino particles allow us to reconstruct, in detail, all

      types of information about the moment of their creation: sight, sound,

      microwaves, ultrasound, the smell of antiseptic and blood, and the

      sting of cordite and gunpowder in the back of the nose.

      But this is a staggering amount of information, even for a single

      second . We had no realistic way to store it, let alone process it in real

      tim e. The amount of data gathered for a few minutes would have

      overwhelmed all the storage servers at Harvard. We could open up a

      door to the past, but would see nothing in the tsunami of bits that

      flooded forth.

      [Behind Dr. Kirino is a machine that looks like a large clinical MRI

      scanner. She steps to the side so that the camera can zoom slowly inside the

      tube of the scanner where the volunteer's body would go during the process .

      As the camera moves through the tube, continuing towards the light at the

      end of the tunnel, her voice continues off camera.]

      Perhaps given enough time, we could have come up with a solution

      that would have allowed the data to be recorded. But Evan believed

      that we could not afford to wait . The surviving relatives of the victims

      were aging, dying, and the War was about to fade out of living

      memory. There was a duty, he felt, to offer the surviving relatives

      whatever answers we could get.

      So I came up with the idea of using the human brain to process the

      information gathered by the B ohm -Kirino detectors. The brain's

      massively parallel processing capabilities, the bedrock of consciousness,

      proved quite effective at filtering and making sense of the torrent of

      data from the detectors. The brain could be given the raw electrical

      signals, throw 99.999% of it away, and turn the rest into sight, sound,

      smell, and make sense of it all and record them as memories .

      This really shouldn't surprise us. After all, this is what our brains

      do, every second of our lives . The raw signals from our eyes, ears, skin

      and tongue would overwhelm any supercomputer, but from second to

      second, our brain manages to construct the consciousness of our

      existence from all that noise.

      “ For our volunteer subjects, the process creates the illusion of

      experiencing the p ast, as though they were in that place, at that time,” I

      wrote in Nature.

      How I regret using the word “ illusion ” now . So much weight

      ended up being
    placed on my poor word choice . History is like that:

      the truly important decisions never seemed important at the time.

      Yes, the brain takes the signals and makes a story out of them, but

      there's nothing illusory about it, whether in the past or now.

      [Ezary has a placid face that is belied by the intensity of his gaze . He enjoys

      giving lectures, not because he likes hearing himself talk, but because he

      thinks he will learn something new each time he tries to explain.]

      Archibald Ezary, Radhabinod Pal Professor of Law, Co - Director of East

      Asian Studies, Harvard Law School:

      The legal debate between China and Japan about Wei's work,

      almost twenty years ago, was not really new . Who should have control

      over the past is a question that has troubled all of us, in various forms,

      for many years . But the invention of the Kirino Process made this

      struggle to control the past a literal, rather than merely a metaphorical,

      issue.

      A state has a temporal dimension as well as a spatial one . It grows

      and shrinks over time, subjugating new peoples and sometimes freeing

      their descendants . Japan today may be thought of as just the home

      islands, but back in 1942, at its height, the Japanese Empire ruled

      Korea, most of China, Taiwan, Sakhalin, the Philippines, Vietnam,

      Thailand, Laos, Burma, Malaysia and large parts of Indonesia, as well

      as large swaths of the islands in the Pacific. The legacy of that time

      shapes Asia to this day.

      One of the most vexing problems created by the violent and

      unstable process by which states expand and contract over time is this:

      as control over a territory shifts between sovereigns over time, which

      sovereign should have jurisdiction over that territory's past?

      Before Evan Wei's demonstration, the most that the issue of

      jurisdiction over the past intruded on real life was an argument over

      whether Spain or America would have the right to the sovereign's

      share of treasure from sunken 16th - century Spanish galleons

      recovered in contemporary American waters, or whether Greece or

      England should keep the Elgin Marbles. But now the stakes are much

      higher.

      So, is Harbin during the years between 1931 and 1945 Japanese

      territory, as the Japanese government contends? Or is it Chinese, as

     

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