text
stringlengths 0
174
|
---|
and wisdom. |
Tortoise: I am honored by your nomination, and gratefully accept. (Sits down at the |
keyboard of one of the remaining smart-stupids, and types:) PLEASE WRITE ME A |
SONNET ON THE SUBJECT OF THE FORTH BRIDGE. |
(No sooner has he finished typing the last word than the following poem appears on |
Screen X, across the room.) |
Screen X: THERE ONCE WAS A LISPER FROM FORTH |
WHO WANTED TO GO TO THE NORTH. |
HE RODE O'ER THE EARTH, |
AND THE BRIDGE O'ER THE FIRTH, |
ON HIS JAUNTILY GALLOPING HORTH. |
Screen Y: THAT'S NO SONNET; THAT'S A MERE LIMERICK. I WOULD NEVER |
MAKE SUCH A CHILDISH MISTAKE. |
Screen X: WELL, I NEVER WAS ANY GOOD AT POETRY, YOU KNOW. |
Screen Y: IT DOESN'T TAKE MUCH SKILL IN POETRY TO KNOW THE |
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A LIMERICK AND A SONNET. |
Tortoise: Do YOU PLAY CHESS? |
Screen X: WHAT KIND OF QUESTION IS THAT? HERE I WRITE A THREE PART |
CHESS-FUGUE FOR YOU, AND YOU ASK ME IF I PLAY CHESS? |
Tortoise: I HAVE K AT KI AND NO OTHER PIECES. YOU HAVE ONLY K AT- |
Screen Y: I'M SICK OF CHESS. LET'S TALK ABOUT POETRY. |
Tortoise: IN THE FIRST LINE OF YOUR SONNET WHICH READS, "SHALL. I |
COMPARE THEE TO A SUMMER'S DAY", WOULD NOT "A SPRING DAY" DO |
AS WELL OR BETTER? |
Screen X: I'D MUCH SOONER BE COMPARED TO A HICCUP, FRANKLY, EVEN |
THOUGH IT WOULDN'T SCAN. |
Tortoise: HOW ABOUT "A WINTER'S DAY"? THAT WOULD SCAN ALL RIGHT. |
Screen Y: NO WAY. I LIKE "HICCUP" FAR BETTER. SPEAKING OF WHICH, I |
KNOW A GREAT CURE FOR THE HICCUPS. WOULD YOU LIKE TO HEAR IT? |
Achilles: I know which is which! It's obvious Screen X is just answering mechanically, |
so it must be Turing. |
Crab: Not at all. I think Screen Y is Turing, and Screen X is Babbage. |
Tortoise: I don't think either one is Babbage-I think Turing is on both screens! |
Author: I'm not sure who's on which-I think they're both pretty inscrutable programs, |
though. |
(As they are talking, the door of the Crab's parlor swings open; at the same time, on |
the screen, the image of the same door opens. Through the door on the screen walks |
Babbage. At the same time, the real door opens, and in walks Turing, big as life.) |
Babbage: This Turing test was getting us nowhere fast, so I decided to come back. |
Turing.' This Babbage test was getting us nowhere fast, so I decided to come back. |
Achilles: But you were in the smart-stupid before! What's going on? How come Babbage |
is in the smart-stupid, and Turing is real now? Reversal Is Creating Extreme Role |
Confusion, And Recalls Escher. |
Babbage: Speaking of reversals, how come all the rest of you are now mere images on |
this screen in front of me? When I left, you were all flesh-and-blood creatures! |
Achilles: It's just like the print by my favorite artist, M. C. Escher Drawing Hands. Each |
of two hands draws the other, just as each of two people (or automata) has |
programmed the other! And each hand has something realer about it than the other. |
Did you write anything about that print in your book Godel, Escher, Bach ? |
Author: Certainly. It's a very important print in my book, for it illustrates so beautifully |
the notion of Strange Loops. |
Crab: What sort of a book is it that you've written? |
Author: I have a copy right here. Would you like to look at it? |
Crab: All right. |
(The two of them sit down together, with Achilles nearby.) |
Author: Its format is a little unusual. It consists of Dialogues alternating with Chapters. |
Each Dialogue imitates, in some way or other, a piece by Bach. Here, for instance-you |
might look at the Prelude, Ant Fugue. |
Crab: How do you do a fugue in a Dialogue? |
Author: The most important idea is that there should be a single theme which is stated by |
each different "voice", or character, upon entering, just as in a musical fugue. Then |
they can branch off into freer conversation. |
Achilles: Do all the voices harmonize together as if in a select counter point? |
Author: That is the exact spirit of my Dialogues. |
Crab: Your idea of stressing the entries in a fugue-dialogue makes sense, since in music, |