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"No one has ever produced a statement of fact that was technically true. The most accurate statements of science we have today are accurate to only 15 decimal places."
- Bart Kosko

Living Space Ship  
  A space ship animated by a transplanted human brain.  

He became aware of an oppressive lack of human noises aboard this eerie visitor. The soft hum of generators, yes; but no voices from the crew, no pad of rubber soles on metal, no chittering of communications systems. Who had operated the airlocks and steered the ship?

He glanced around the bare metal compartment, noting the apparent age of the equipment, and glumly thought: A ghost ship for true.

“All right,” he suddenly barked. His voice sounded flat and unnaturally loud in the close, still confines of the room. “Stop hiding, whoever you are.”

The voice laughed. “Does living alone in space make you so abrupt, Brant? It hasn’t affected me that way. No, I can’t see inside the ship. Only outside. Just space, space, space.” The tones were edged for a moment with a repressed hysteria. “Where am I? Why, right here, all around you.”

Kittinger looked all around himself. “What kind of nonsense is this?” he snorted.

“You still don’t see me? You're standing on me. Or rather, in me. I’m the ship.”

“...But there was method, as they say, in my madness. I am a living space-ship. I’m as immune to a dead space-ship— an IP cruiser, for instance—as you would be to a remote-controlled robot. My reflexes are twice as fast. I feel things directly, not through instruments..."

“Yes, of course. Transplanted human brains. That brought me within the scope of the laws prohibiting experimentation with living humans. I was quite proud of myself, Brant. Nobody else ever solved the secret of transferring living brains to machinery. Nobody else ever had the surgical skill to make the hundreds and hundreds of nerve connections necessary. But I did. And after a while I was outlawed for it.”

Technovelgy from Solar Plexus, by James Blish.
Published by Astonishing Stories in 1941
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