About This Book
A traveler relates arrival in a remote, imagined land and records encounters with customs that invert familiar moral and legal assumptions. Through episodes of first impressions, imprisonment, encounters with reformers and malcontents, and eventual escape, the narrative satirizes social institutions, religion, and notions of responsibility by depicting laws that punish illness and revere ritual while treating mechanical growth with apprehension. Interleaved essays examine education, economic practices, and speculative philosophy, including a sustained argument that machines might evolve agency and sections considering the ethical claims of nonhuman life. The work combines travel fiction and polemic to probe progress, habit, and human self-deception.