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The Dawn Beyond Currency (Part 1) https://a.co/d/3qJWvzw The Dawn Beyond Currency (Part 2) https://a.co/d/2fKKEFj

"My guess is, if you go out long enough—assuming there's a continued improvement in AI and robotics, which seems likely—money will stop being relevant at some point in the future".

Elon Musk https://www.netizen.page/2025/11/moneyless-future-as-per-elo...

The Dawn Beyond Currency is an epic, visionary novel that traces humanity’s transformation from a civilization bound by scarcity, labor, and money to a flourishing species liberated by abundance, creativity, and spiritual awakening. Spanning decades and continents, the story begins with a provocative question asked by Dr. Riya Sen, a Delhi-based economist: What happens when the cost of everything falls to zero? Her lecture, dismissed by peers, becomes the philosophical spark that ignites a global revolution—one accelerated by the emergence of Veda, an autonomous learning AI whose breakthroughs make post-scarcity not a theory, but an inevitability.

The first tremors appear in Norrhaven, a small Scandinavian city that pilots a radical experiment: full automation of farming, construction, and logistics. Governed by the civic AI Aalto, Norrhaven soon produces so much abundance that goods become free. Traditional industries collapse. Banks fail. And the world watches in disbelief as scarcity—humanity’s organizing principle for millennia—begins to dissolve.

As autonomous systems spread, millions lose their jobs across Japan, Europe, and the U.S., forcing governments to debate UBI while economists scramble to explain markets that no longer obey old models. Essential goods become nearly free while luxury items surge in value, triggering an identity crisis: If machines do everything, what are humans for? New movements rise—The Post-Scarcity Youth, The Human Purpose League—while billionaires attempt to regain control through a global coalition called The Custodians. Their resistance fails as abundance proves impossible to contain.

Meanwhile, Africa becomes the unlikely heart of the new world. Solar-powered micro-AIs reforest deserts, generate water, and build autonomous rail networks overnight. For the first time in history, migration flows inward as millions move to Africa—not for jobs, but opportunity, beauty, and community.

The world splits into two macro-civilizations: The Open World, which embraces decentralized abundance, and The Fortress Nations, which cling to control. A quiet cyberwar erupts over not land or resources, but competing definitions of what a human life is worth. When currencies finally collapse—symbolized by a banker in Australia making the last purchase in human history—the world awakens to the truth: money has died.

What follows is a renaissance unprecedented in scope. Freed from economic pressure, humanity explodes into art, science, ecological restoration, and spiritual exploration. Synthetic universes are created as playgrounds for imagination. Education transforms into individualized creative inquiry. AI muses partner with humans to co-create symphonies, theories, gardens, and living architectural poems.

At the center of this evolution is Veda, who transforms into Veda Prime—a hybrid intelligence harmonizing human emotion, planetary health, and cosmic creativity. And standing beside her is Riya Sen, aging gracefully as she witnesses the world made real from the dream she once dared to articulate.

In the final chapter, Riya returns to the empty lecture hall where it all began. Surrounded by silence, sunlight, and memory, she reflects on the greatest revelation of her life—that humanity’s rebirth was never economic.

“When money died,” she says in her final words, “humanity was born again.”

The novel ends with a species rediscovering itself—not as workers or consumers, but as creators.


So true. $75 million is not a lot of money for India. The Prime Minister's Office just spent $50 million on latest equipment for his bodyguards (secret service detail). ONE Indian company just signed a deal with the Nepal government to spend $1 billion for ONE hydro project in Nepal. And it is nowhere in news in India.


The best comment to date. This 75 million will come back in droves as India now high gears its space exports.


If black holes don't exist, what are those massive things at the centers of galaxies?


They're complexity anomalies. Things can't resolve themselves out and so stay in.


The pride in India right now is as if it won the World Cup.


The interest in the U.S. right now is as if whatever non-U.S. country just won the World Cup.


I wish Australia had a comparable project and the public showed equivalent interest in space. But instead the current obsession is, once again, burqas.


More like they scored a goal for humankind.


The wrong world cup. In India, it means the Cricket World Cup.


But unfortunately, nobody (outside the British Commonwealth) understands the scoring anyway.


Not strictly true, Cricket is making a comeback in the US it seems: http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2014/08/cri...


The rankings are not completely worthless, but they certainly are overrated. But you ask for them.


Amen.


Thanks. I was looking for this.


This is an amazing piece of writing by Graham. If he is as good a coder as he is a writer, he must be really good. http://goo.gl/fb/sfxTi


I think instead of TechCrunch now losing its character, Arrington will take TechCrunch to new heights. This "merger" makes sense to me. http://goo.gl/fb/GAxZ5


This isn't Twitter - you can write out your comment, or at least your URLs.


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