Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
question and thereby obtain the Ultimate Answers!"
"But how does one build such a
device?" I asked. "And how can you be sure, O illustrious
Klapaucius, that it won't respond by sending us packing in much the
same instamatic hyperstitial and so forth manner the original H. P.
L. D.'s employed, as you say, on your worthy person?"
"Leave that to me," he said.
"Rest assured, I shall learn the Great Mystery of the H. P. L.
D.'s, good Bonhomius, and you shall find the optimal way in which to
put your natural abhorrence of evil into action!"
You can imagine, kind sir, the great
joy that filled me upon hearing these words, and the eagerness with
which I assisted Klapaucius in the execution of his plan. As it
turned out, this digital device was none other than the famed
Gnostotron conceived by Chlorian Theoreticus the Proph just before
his lamentable demise, a machine able literally to contain the
Universe Itself within its innumerable memory banks.
(Klapaucius, however, was not satisfied with the name, and now and
then tried to think up others to christen it: the Omniac, the
Pansophoscope, APOC for All Purpose Ontologue Computer, or the
Mahatmatic 500, to mention a few.) In exactly one year and six days,
this mighty machine was completed, and so enormous was it, we
had to house it in Phlaphundria, the hollowed-out moon of the
Phlists-—and truly, an ant had been no more lost aboard an
ocean liner than we in the bowels of this binary behemoth, among its
endless coils and cables, eschatological toggles and transformers,
those hagiopneumatic rectifiers and tempta-tional resistors. I
confess my wire hair stood on end and my laminated alternator skipped
a beat when my distinguished mentor sat me down before the Central
Control Console and left me face-to-face with this awesome, towering
thing. The flashing lights that played across its panels were like
the very stars in the firmament; everywhere were signs that read
danger: highly ineffable!; and potentiometers, their dials spinning
wildly, showed logic and semantic fields building up to unheard-of
levels of intensity. Beneath my feet heaved a sea of preternatural
and pretermechanical wisdom, wisdom that swirled like a spell through
parsecs of circuitry and megahectares of magnets, swirled and
surrounded me on every side, that I felt, in my shameful ignorance,
of no more consequence than a mere mote of dust. I overcame this
weakness only by recalling my lifelong love of Good, the passion I
had conceived for Truth and Beauty when little more than a gleam in
my constructor's oscilloscope. Thus fortified, I managed to stammer
out the first question: "Speak, what manner of machine art
thou?"
A hot wind then arose from its glowing
tubes, and there came a voice from that wind, a whispering thunder
that seared me to the core, and the voice said:
Ego
sum Ens Omnipotens,
Omnisapiens, in Spiritu Intellectronico Navigans, luce cybernetica in
saecula saeculorum
litterus opera omnia cognoscens,
et
caetera, et caetera.
Such was my fright upon hearing this
reply, that I was quite unable to continue the interrogation until
Klapaucius returned and reduced the EMF (epistemotive force) to one
billionth of its voltage by adjusting the theostats. Then I asked the
Gnostotron if it would be so kind as to answer questions touching the
Highest Possible Level of Development and its Terrible Secret.
But Klapaucius said that that was not the way: one should instead
request the Ontologue Computer to model within its silver and crystal
depths a single inhabitant of that square planet, and at the same
time provide the model with an adequate degree of loquacity. This
promptly done, we were ready to begin in earnest.
Still I quaked and quailed and could
hardly speak, so Klapaucius took my place before the Central Control
Console and said:
"What are you?"
"I already answered that,"
snapped the machine, clearly annoyed.
"I mean, are you man or robot?"
explained Klapaucius.
"And what, according to you, is
the difference?" said the machine.
"Look, if you're going to answer
questions with questions, we'll get absolutely nowhere," said
Klapaucius sternly. "You know what I'm after, all right. Start
talking!"
Though I was appalled at the tone he
took with the machine, it did seem to work, for the machine
said:
"Sometimes men build robots,
sometimes robots build men. What does it matter, really, whether one
thinks with metal or with protoplasm? As for myself, I can assume
whatever substance and shape I choose—or rather, used to
assume, for we no longer indulge in such trifles."
"Indeed," said Klapaucius.
"Then why do you lie around all day and do nothing?"
"And what exactly are we supposed
to do?" the machine replied. At this, Klapaucius grew angry and
said:
"How should I know? We in the
lower levels of development do all sorts of things."
"We did too, in our day."
"But not now?"
"Not now."
"Why not?"
Here the computerized H. P. L. D.
representative balked, saying he had already endured six million such
interrogations and neither he nor his questioners ever profited
from them in the least. But after Klapaucius had raised the
loquacity a little and opened a valve here and there, the voice
answered:
"A trillion years ago we were a
civilization like any other. We believed in the transmittance of
souls, the Virgin Matrix, the infallibility of Pi Squared,
looked upon prayer as regenerative feedback to the Great Programmer,
and so on and so forth. But then skeptics appeared, empiricists and
accidentalists, and in nine centuries they came to the conclusion
that There's No One Up There At All and consequently things
happen not out of any higher plan or purpose, but—well,
they just happen."
"Just happen?" I could not
help but exclaim. "What do you mean?"
"There are, on occasion, deformed
robots," said the voice. "If you should be afflicted with a
hump, for example, but firmly believe the Almighty somehow needs your
hump to realize His Cosmic Design and that it was therefore ordained
along with the rest of Creation, why, then you may be easily
reconciled to your deformity. If, however, they tell you that it's
merely the result of a misplaced molecule, an atom or two that
happened to go the wrong way, then nothing remains for you but
to bay at the moon."
"But a hump may be straightened,"
I protested, "and really any deformity corrected, given a high
enough level of science!"
"Yes, I know," sighed the
machine. "That's how it appears to the ignorant and
simple-minded…"
"You mean, that isn't true?"
Klapaucius and I cried, astounded.
"When a civilization starts
straightening humps," said the machine, "believe me,
there's no end to it! You straighten humps, then you repair and
amplify the mind, make suns rectilinear, give planets legs, fabricate
fates and fortunes of all kinds… Oh, it begins innocently
enough, like discovering fire by rubbing two sticks together, but
eventually it leads to the construction of Omniacs, Deifacts,
Hyperboreons and Ultimathuloriums! The desert on our planet is in
reality no desert, but a Gigagnostotron, in other words a good 10
9
times more powerful than this primitive device of yours. Our
ancestors created it for the simple reason that anything else would
have been too easy for them; in their megalomania they thought to
make the very sand beneath their feet intelligent. Quite pointless,
for there is absolutely no way to improve upon perfection. Can you
understand that, O ye of little development?!"
"Yes, of course," said
Klapaucius, while I quaked and quailed. "Yet why, instead of at
least engaging in some stimulating activity, do you sprawl in that
ingenious sand and only scratch yourselves from time to time?"
"Omnipotence is most omnipotent
when one does nothing!" answered the machine. "You
climb to reach the summit, but once there, discover that all
roads lead down! We are, after all, sensible folk, why should we want
to
do
anything? Our ancestors, true, turned our sun
into a cube and made a box of our planet, arranging its mountains in
a monogram, but that was only to test their Gnostotron. They could
have just as easily assembled the stars in a checkerboard,
extinguished half the heavens and lit up the other half, constructed
beings peopled with lesser beings, giants whose thoughts would be the
intricate dance of a million pygmies, and they could have redesigned
the galaxies, revised the laws of time and space-—but tell
me, what sense would there have been to any of this? Would the
universe be a better place if stars were triangular, or comets went
around on wheels?"
"That's ridiculous!!"
Klapaucius shouted, highly indignant, while I quaked and quailed
all the more. "If you are truly gods, your duty is clear:
immediately banish all the misery and misfortune that oppresses other
sentient beings! You could at least begin with your poor
neighbors—I've seen with my own eyes how they batter one
another! But no, you'd rather lie around all day and pick your noses,
and insult honest travelers in search of knowledge with your
indecent elves in abdomens and messages in ears!"
"Really, you have no sense of
humor," said the machine. "But enough of that. If I
understand you correctly, you wish us to bestow happiness upon
everyone. Well, we devoted over fifteen millennia to that project
alone—that is, eudaemonic tectonics, of which there are
basically two schools, the sudden and revolutionary, and the slow and
evolutionary. Evolutionary eudaemonic tectonics consists
essentially in not lifting a finger to help, confident that every
civilization will eventually muddle through on its own.
Revolutionary solutions, on the other hand, boil down to either
the Carrot or the Stick. The Stick, or bestowing happiness by force,
is found to produce from one to eight hundred times more grief than
no interference whatever. As for the Carrot, the results—believe
it or not—are exactly the same, and that, whether you use an
Ultradeifact, Hypergnostotron, or even an Infernal Machine and
Gehennerator. You've heard, perhaps, of the Crab Nebula?"
"Certainly," said
Klapaucius. "It's the remnants of a supernova that exploded
long ago…"
"Supernova, he says,"
muttered the voice. "No, my well-wishing friend, there was a
planet there, a fairly civilized planet as planets go, flowing with
the usual quantity of blood, sweat and tears. Well, one morning we
dropped eight hundred million transistorized Universal Wish Granters
on that planet, but were no more than a light-week out on our way
home, when suddenly it blew up—and the bits and pieces are
flying apart to this day! The very same thing happened with the
planet of the Hominates… care to hear of that?"
"No, don't bother," replied
a morose Klapaucius.—But I refuse to believe it's impossible,
with a little ingenuity, to make others happy!"
"Believe what you like! We tried
it sixty-four thousand five hundred and thirteen times. The hair on
every one of my heads stands on end when I think of the results. Oh,
we spared no pains for the good of our fellow-creature! We devised a
special telescanner for observing dreams, though you realize of
course that if, say, a religious war were raging on some planet and
each side dreamt only of massacring the other, it would hardly be to
our purpose to make such dreams come true! We had to bestow
happiness, then, without violating any Higher Laws. The problem
was further complicated by the fact that most cosmic civilizations
long for things, in the depths of their souls, they would never