The Answer (1954)

(sfshortstories.com)

36 points | by dash2 3 days ago ago

23 comments

  • ajkjk 3 days ago ago

    I think if a story gives you a sense of wonder when you're young, it's a good story, even if it seems cheesy later. Probably the reason it doesn't later is that you saw so many things like that when you were young and they don't surprise you anymore.

    • AnotherGoodName 3 days ago ago

      A bit like saying Shakespeare is full of cliché’s. Which it is, but it literally invented those cliché’s.

    • antisthenes 3 days ago ago

      I agree.

      I would give anything to feel a sense of wonder that I used to get when reading sci-fi in my youth.

      But "can't enter the same river twice" and all that.

      • xmprt 3 days ago ago

        Who's writing good scifi these days which evoke that same sense of wonder? Project Hail Mary was a fun read but felt a bit too in the weeds with the details.

        • bobbiechen 3 days ago ago

          Gotta be Ted Chiang. Try his short story collection titled Exhalation: Stories.

  • joblessjunkie 3 days ago ago

    Reminds me quite a bit of Asimov’s “The Last Question”, which mines the same “computer-as-God” vein, is also very short, and has a suspiciously related title. Asimov’s story appeared in 1956, just two years later.

    • gjm11 3 days ago ago

      My exact thought process on seeing the title here: "Ah, 'insufficient data for meaningful answer'. No, wait, that one's called 'The Last Question'. So perhaps it's 'There is now'." :-)

      (Asimov's is better. Also, the version of this one in my memory is better than the actual story, in that "There is now" is better than the rather clunky equivalent in the story. I suppose it's possible that I'm remembering a different, slightly better written, story with the exact same idea.)

    • igravious 3 days ago ago

      Came here to ask what was the Asimov story that echoed this ...

  • rbanffy 3 days ago ago

    You might call it weak and gimmicky all you want, but it entrenched itself deeply into our collective imagination.

    I saw many people come up independently with a direct quote from this story when they saw the IBM promotional image of a man standing in front of an IBM Quantum System One machine.

    The image: https://www.techmonitor.ai/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2023/...

    • imglorp 3 days ago ago

      I think humans are weak and prone to leaping on gimmicks and extrapolating with limited information to wherever their imagination takes them.

      If shown a dazzling, mysterious, $10m glass cube draped with all that hyperbolic "quantum future wow!!" marketing, ordinarily smart people will leap to anything. In reality, QC doesn't seem to have a ton of applications yet.

      • rbanffy 2 days ago ago

        A lot, if not all, of those references were in jest. Nobody was expecting the machine to be an actual deity.

        • IAmBroom 2 days ago ago

          The post you're replying to doesn't suggest anyone expected deification.

          The post suggests sparkly marketing hooplah wrapping up meager actuality.

          • rbanffy 2 days ago ago

            > The post suggests sparkly marketing hooplah wrapping up meager actuality.

            I don't think any of those who quoted from this story fell into the marketing hyperbole. We all know these machines are interesting engineering marvels, but far from actually useful at the moment, with the exception of a very narrow set of problems that fall within the narrow capabilities. The people who fell for it probably never heard of this story.

  • dash2 3 days ago ago
    • dooglius 3 days ago ago

      The review is only a little shorter than the story!

  • ray02398 3 days ago ago

    I remember trying this on Wolfram Alpha when it launched back around 2010. https://smallthingsmostly.me/istheregod

  • satisfice 3 days ago ago

    See Arthur C. Clark, Nine Billion Names of God, from 1953

  • Animats 3 days ago ago

    It's the same story as "Company Man", posted here yesterday. But it was a new idea when Asimov wrote it.

  • igravious 3 days ago ago

    Was there a similar Asimov story that ended with the words, "let there be light!" ?

  • readthenotes1 3 days ago ago

    Fred Brown is also responsible for a famous Star Trek episode