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"did I had an extremely expensive wife - she would see a new car that she liked and just buy it... under California law I was bound to buy her debts. I think I turned out 16 novels in five years."
- Philip K. Dick

Pseudopersonalities  
  Fragments of distress, playing back in an autonomous robot's brain.  

In his short story "Terminus" (1965) Stanislaw Lem describes an autonomous robot that still carries with him the last moments of a space disaster, which he cannot integrate; the robot cannot help tapping out the distress of the crew in Morse code as he works:

"What was Terminus, anyway? An electronically wired box. Hell, anything alive, any living creature would have perished long ago in the wreckage. So now what? Rap out a few questions before his glass eyes? And even if he did that, what would he get out of him?

Would they—those dead men—give him a neat and coherent narrative of what happened? Or wouldn’t he just hear a lot of screaming and yelling, cries for oxygen, for help. . . . And what was he to tell him? That they didn’t exist?

That they were only “pseudopersonalities,” isolated figments of his electronic brain—an illusion, a case of the hiccups? That the terror of those men was a fake terror, that their death struggle, repeated every single night, had as much meaning as a worn-out record?"

Technovelgy from Terminus, by Stanislaw Lem.
Published by Iskry in 1961
Additional resources -

Compare to mental phantasmagoria from The Lotus-Engine (1940) by Raymond Z. Gallun.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from Terminus
  More Ideas and Technology by Stanislaw Lem
  Tech news articles related to Terminus
  Tech news articles related to works by Stanislaw Lem

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