The Council of Alephs
Posted: Mon Sep 16, 2024 11:34 pm
Across the Dodecaverse there are beings of unfathomable power known as Alephs. They didn't create nor maintain the Dodecaverse (that honor presumably belongs to the Naked Singularities) but they wield similar power and responsibility. In this post I'm going to go into what they are in great detail.
A recap on the Dodecaverse
All of my conworlds, books, games, etc take place within the Dodecaverse -- a twelve-dimensional collection of universes with their own unique physical properties. Around three thousand years ago by their time (far in our future), a civilization of immortal humans and Automatons that spanned almost three galaxies from our universe (designated [0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0] in the coordinate scheme) began exploring it. Within a couple hundred years, their original universe went temporally hyperbolic, randomly causing entire lines of causality to be permanently erased. This accelerated exploration of the Dodecaverse -- planets were blasted apart into Conical Arks that transported billions of people at a time to different universes. The Council of Alephs played a role in the collapse of the parent universe -- they didn't cause it, but they were aware of what caused it and took actions to prevent it from happening again. I'll cover some of that somewhere in this post. In any case, humans spread out very far into the Dodecaverse and as the millenia passed, those groups that were able to retain their old technology spread out even farther, limited somewhat by the Labyr of course.
The different universes largely lost connection with one another -- unlike the Council of Alephs, the surviving civilizations can't easily communicate with other universes, and that's even assuming they retain the technological ability to travel the Dodecaverse -- different physical laws cause original technology to not work right for all kinds of reasons.
In any case, this is just a brief recap of what the Dodecaverse is and who's occupying it.
Infinite power and Aleph Power
None of the universes in the dodecaverse (including our own) is known to use mathematical infinity, with the exception of the size of the universe (some are spatially infinite in one or more of the axises, some are actually hyperbolic and split off infinitely in an infinite number of directions). This would cause issues like Zeno's paradox where nothing can ever change or happen because there would be a mathematically infinite amount of steps involved. Instead, energy and things like it that reach a certain density will become "infinite", acting like they're infinite despite being some fixed value.
Something "infinite" like this, assuming it's under the control of a conscious entity, can transfer as much finite energy as wants as many times as it wants. So in a universe that uses magic, a spellcaster that has infinite mana can cast spells that cost finite mana as many times as they want. They're not weak by any means -- they can absolutely destroy the entire finite human civilization there if they want to. However, they're not Aleph.
Infinities can be transferred. If there's a spell that costs infinite mana because something in its effect is infinite, then with infinite mana it can be done exactly once. However, the concept of Aleph gets around this -- Aleph is immutable no matter how many infinite spells or infinite energy to get matter up to light speed or whatever is done. If you have Aleph mana then you will always have aleph mana, and nothing (including the interaction of other beings with aleph mana) can get around this.
Becoming an Aleph (by Council standards)
Merely gaining aleph power doesn't make you an Aleph. It definitely makes you a being of unfathomable power in your universe. In universes without a magic mechanism, you can gain similar power by creating an object that contains aleph energy that you can control in some way -- these are obviously more complicated to create because of how difficult it is to contain even infinite energy, but it is possible since, as mentioned, you have infinite energy to work with,
In any case, gaining Aleph power in some form may make members of the Council aware of you, but there are some other conditions you have to fulfill before they'll actually contact you.
1. Just because you have Aleph power doesn't mean that you're invulnerable. You can still totally die, and if immortality tech didn't make it to your universe then you can even die of old age. A being with aleph mana that dies will effectively erase the aleph mana from existence (it'll still exist because it's immutable but it's attached to something that is no longer connected to the dodecaverse). If your aleph power is contained within a controllable object, then when you die others could conceivably use it. To become an Alepn you have to become completely invulnerable to death by any means.
There are various ways of achieving this, and a lot depends on the rules of your universe, but generally it involves separating your conscious existence from your corporeal existence in some way. Aleph power works because there's a temporally parabolic subuniverse that contains infinite power -- if infinite power gets transferred out, the timeline resets and it contains infinite power again. So all you'd really need to do is transfer your conscious existence there. It's conjectured by the Council of Alephs that the actual powers in the Dodecaverse help beings achieve this because conscious experience is still poorly understood and there are many many ways this could go horribly wrong. Many of the beings on the council have stories of Ascending in this way where they got trapped in infinite loops of singular experience only to be rescued eventually by something not under their own control.
In any case, once separated you're no longer tied to your corporeal form. If it dies or the entire subuniverse it's in is erased or something you can use your aleph power to create a new corporeal form.
2. The Council of Alephs only invite a being with aleph power if they have supremacy in their universe. Conditions that cause one being to achieve aleph power can cause other beings to also achieve aleph power, and this will typically lead to power struggles because beings that achieve aleph are typically very power hungry. Since the effects of aleph power can spill over to nearby universes, if this is bad enough it may cause the Council to deem that universe some kind of threat and if their interventions don't work, they'll put it under a Seal.
In order to be contacted by the Council of Alephs, you have to undeniably either be the strongest in your universe or have the other alephs under your control in some way, or have them sustainably sealed away or something. Some of the Alephs in the Council have the ability of Selective Omniscience that allows them to determine the state of your entire universe and whether you have supremacy or not.
Note that you don't have to actually rule over your own entire universe -- you just have to have enough power to do so and the abilities to counteract any other alephs that may exist. Once you've been contacted, the Council will intervene and prevent future Alephs from forming without your express consent. They're quite good at doing this -- they've pooled together the abilities and knowledge of alephs across incalculable universes and refined their techniques over thousands of years -- and that's not even including the non-human dodecaverse natives who were doing it back when humans were beating each other up with sticks.
3. If you're too power-hungry or too genocidal you won't be contacted and will instead likely be Sealed or otherwise contained. The standards here are really really low -- most of the beings on the Council of Alephs are antiheroes at absolute best and supervillains at worst, and they would definitely subjugate or destroy one another if they could. However, they're willing to cooperate with each other over common interests, like making sure the Dodecaverse itself isn't damaged or their local supremacy isn't threatened. There are however beings that achieve Aleph that literally want to end all of existence, or are unwilling to cooperate (or even pretend to) under any circumstances whatsoever. If you're one of those, you're not getting invited to the Council and your universe will probably be detached from the Dodecaverse soon enough.
In the next post, I'll cover how Alephs interact with one another and other universes.
A recap on the Dodecaverse
All of my conworlds, books, games, etc take place within the Dodecaverse -- a twelve-dimensional collection of universes with their own unique physical properties. Around three thousand years ago by their time (far in our future), a civilization of immortal humans and Automatons that spanned almost three galaxies from our universe (designated [0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0] in the coordinate scheme) began exploring it. Within a couple hundred years, their original universe went temporally hyperbolic, randomly causing entire lines of causality to be permanently erased. This accelerated exploration of the Dodecaverse -- planets were blasted apart into Conical Arks that transported billions of people at a time to different universes. The Council of Alephs played a role in the collapse of the parent universe -- they didn't cause it, but they were aware of what caused it and took actions to prevent it from happening again. I'll cover some of that somewhere in this post. In any case, humans spread out very far into the Dodecaverse and as the millenia passed, those groups that were able to retain their old technology spread out even farther, limited somewhat by the Labyr of course.
The different universes largely lost connection with one another -- unlike the Council of Alephs, the surviving civilizations can't easily communicate with other universes, and that's even assuming they retain the technological ability to travel the Dodecaverse -- different physical laws cause original technology to not work right for all kinds of reasons.
In any case, this is just a brief recap of what the Dodecaverse is and who's occupying it.
Infinite power and Aleph Power
None of the universes in the dodecaverse (including our own) is known to use mathematical infinity, with the exception of the size of the universe (some are spatially infinite in one or more of the axises, some are actually hyperbolic and split off infinitely in an infinite number of directions). This would cause issues like Zeno's paradox where nothing can ever change or happen because there would be a mathematically infinite amount of steps involved. Instead, energy and things like it that reach a certain density will become "infinite", acting like they're infinite despite being some fixed value.
Something "infinite" like this, assuming it's under the control of a conscious entity, can transfer as much finite energy as wants as many times as it wants. So in a universe that uses magic, a spellcaster that has infinite mana can cast spells that cost finite mana as many times as they want. They're not weak by any means -- they can absolutely destroy the entire finite human civilization there if they want to. However, they're not Aleph.
Infinities can be transferred. If there's a spell that costs infinite mana because something in its effect is infinite, then with infinite mana it can be done exactly once. However, the concept of Aleph gets around this -- Aleph is immutable no matter how many infinite spells or infinite energy to get matter up to light speed or whatever is done. If you have Aleph mana then you will always have aleph mana, and nothing (including the interaction of other beings with aleph mana) can get around this.
Becoming an Aleph (by Council standards)
Merely gaining aleph power doesn't make you an Aleph. It definitely makes you a being of unfathomable power in your universe. In universes without a magic mechanism, you can gain similar power by creating an object that contains aleph energy that you can control in some way -- these are obviously more complicated to create because of how difficult it is to contain even infinite energy, but it is possible since, as mentioned, you have infinite energy to work with,
In any case, gaining Aleph power in some form may make members of the Council aware of you, but there are some other conditions you have to fulfill before they'll actually contact you.
1. Just because you have Aleph power doesn't mean that you're invulnerable. You can still totally die, and if immortality tech didn't make it to your universe then you can even die of old age. A being with aleph mana that dies will effectively erase the aleph mana from existence (it'll still exist because it's immutable but it's attached to something that is no longer connected to the dodecaverse). If your aleph power is contained within a controllable object, then when you die others could conceivably use it. To become an Alepn you have to become completely invulnerable to death by any means.
There are various ways of achieving this, and a lot depends on the rules of your universe, but generally it involves separating your conscious existence from your corporeal existence in some way. Aleph power works because there's a temporally parabolic subuniverse that contains infinite power -- if infinite power gets transferred out, the timeline resets and it contains infinite power again. So all you'd really need to do is transfer your conscious existence there. It's conjectured by the Council of Alephs that the actual powers in the Dodecaverse help beings achieve this because conscious experience is still poorly understood and there are many many ways this could go horribly wrong. Many of the beings on the council have stories of Ascending in this way where they got trapped in infinite loops of singular experience only to be rescued eventually by something not under their own control.
In any case, once separated you're no longer tied to your corporeal form. If it dies or the entire subuniverse it's in is erased or something you can use your aleph power to create a new corporeal form.
2. The Council of Alephs only invite a being with aleph power if they have supremacy in their universe. Conditions that cause one being to achieve aleph power can cause other beings to also achieve aleph power, and this will typically lead to power struggles because beings that achieve aleph are typically very power hungry. Since the effects of aleph power can spill over to nearby universes, if this is bad enough it may cause the Council to deem that universe some kind of threat and if their interventions don't work, they'll put it under a Seal.
In order to be contacted by the Council of Alephs, you have to undeniably either be the strongest in your universe or have the other alephs under your control in some way, or have them sustainably sealed away or something. Some of the Alephs in the Council have the ability of Selective Omniscience that allows them to determine the state of your entire universe and whether you have supremacy or not.
Note that you don't have to actually rule over your own entire universe -- you just have to have enough power to do so and the abilities to counteract any other alephs that may exist. Once you've been contacted, the Council will intervene and prevent future Alephs from forming without your express consent. They're quite good at doing this -- they've pooled together the abilities and knowledge of alephs across incalculable universes and refined their techniques over thousands of years -- and that's not even including the non-human dodecaverse natives who were doing it back when humans were beating each other up with sticks.
3. If you're too power-hungry or too genocidal you won't be contacted and will instead likely be Sealed or otherwise contained. The standards here are really really low -- most of the beings on the Council of Alephs are antiheroes at absolute best and supervillains at worst, and they would definitely subjugate or destroy one another if they could. However, they're willing to cooperate with each other over common interests, like making sure the Dodecaverse itself isn't damaged or their local supremacy isn't threatened. There are however beings that achieve Aleph that literally want to end all of existence, or are unwilling to cooperate (or even pretend to) under any circumstances whatsoever. If you're one of those, you're not getting invited to the Council and your universe will probably be detached from the Dodecaverse soon enough.
In the next post, I'll cover how Alephs interact with one another and other universes.