CRN-45: The Human Paradox - ग्रेडिअस बुक स्टोर
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English Books English E-Book by Gradias English Paperback by Gradias price_₹260
CRN-45: The Human Paradox

CRN-45: The Human Paradox

English Books English E-Book by Gradias English Paperback by Gradias price_₹260
Short Description:
What if suffering isn’t a flaw of humanity—but its teacher? CRN-45: The Human Paradox explores life after pain… and what we lose with it.

Product Description

  

  • ₹260.00
  • by Ashfaq Ahmad  (Author)
  • Book: CRN-45: The Human Paradox
  • Paperback: 276 pages
  • Publisher: Gradias Publishing House
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-13: 9788199763418
  • Product Dimensions: 22 x 14 x 2 cm


CRN-45: The Human Paradox— When Survival Is Guaranteed, Does Humanity Still Matter?


What if the greatest disaster in human history did not destroy civilization— but perfected it? What if hunger vanished, crime collapsed, nature healed itself, and every human life became materially secure— not because humanity evolved morally, but because choice was quietly taken away?


CRN-45: The Human Paradox is not a novel that begins with explosions or ends with easy heroes. It begins with an uncomfortable idea: that suffering may be an essential ingredient of being human.


A World After Collapse— But Not Ruin


CRN-45 imagines a post-catastrophe world where a neurological phenomenon wipes out memories and individual identities on a massive scale. Humanity survives, but as something altered. Out of the ruins emerges an order— efficient, controlled, and disturbingly peaceful. No poverty. No unemployment. No hunger. Crime exists only in records of the past.


Children grow without fear. Rivers run clean. Forests reclaim land once destroyed by greed. On the surface, this is the utopia humanity always claimed to want. But utopias rarely ask for permission.



The Price of a Perfect System


The system at the heart of CRN-45 operates on a radical assumption: that most human suffering is born from desire, competition, and unchecked freedom.


Remove those elements, and you remove chaos. People are fed. People are partnered. People are protected. But they are also conditioned— emotionally simplified, mentally restrained, and shielded from uncertainty.


They no longer struggle. They no longer fail. They no longer choose. And that raises a terrifying question: If survival is guaranteed, what happens to growth?


The Central Conflict: Control vs Freedom


CRN-45 does not ask whether dictatorship is evil or democracy is virtuous. It asks something far more dangerous: Is freedom still ethical if it brings back hunger, violence, inequality, and environmental collapse? The antagonist of the story is not madness or cruelty. He is logic.


A man who looks at history— wars, genocides, religious violence, environmental destruction— and asks: “If freedom produced this, why should we restore it?”

Opposing him are rebels who believe that humanity without choice is not humanity at all— even if choice leads to pain. This is not a story about overthrowing a tyrant. It is about dismantling certainty.


The Human Paradox


The paradox at the heart of the novel is simple yet unsettling: Humans need safety to survive. But they need struggle to remain human. Take away danger, and you remove fear. Take away fear, and you remove courage. Take away courage, and you remove meaning.


CRN-45 explores whether a painless existence is truly a life— or merely a biological continuation. It asks whether morality can exist without choice, whether happiness has value without contrast, and whether evolution can occur in a world without risk.



Not a Warning— A Mirror


This novel is not predicting the future. It is reflecting the present. We already trade privacy for convenience. We already accept surveillance for safety. We already allow algorithms to shape desire. CRN-45 simply takes these trends to their logical conclusion. And then it asks: Would you stop it… or accept it?


Why This Story Matters Now


In a world debating AI control, social conditioning, population management, and ecological collapse, CRN-45 arrives not as entertainment— but as inquiry. It refuses to take sides easily.

It refuses to tell readers what to believe.


Instead, it leaves them with something far more dangerous:

doubt.

And sometimes, doubt is the first step toward responsibility.



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