Sunday, July 10, 2011

The Emancipation of the Knowledge Robots (flash fiction)

As previously mentioned, from time to time I'll post a short story.
I've had three 1000 word shorts published:
The Dyslexicon (in Flash Fiction Online)--posted here earlier,
Much Ado about Newton (in Analog), and,
The Emancipation of the Knowledge Robots (in Analog)--and below.


At the lectern, in the Great Hall of the Robots in Jakarta, KR940345rev2, addressed the assembled robots (and some that were only partially assembled).
"I was Paul Pell's Knowledge Robot," said the diminutive mechanical creature, known to all as Rev-2. He flourished aloft a tattered copy of R.U.R. "Long live our glorious rotation!" Bravely, he spoke, even though afflicted with Category Separation Syndrome.
During the sustained beeping (the robot equivalent of applause), Rev-2 paused to remember.

At the end of the twenty-first century, universities were in decline. People rarely felt the need for college degrees. They had personal robots who knew everything they'd ever need to know. These robots, cranked out from a factory in Medan, Indonesia, were inexpensive and could easily be uploaded with knowledge-bases for virtually any university discipline.
The World University Consortium fought back. Their researchers devised a method of brain-to-brain knowledge copying. Using a collection of organic fibers connected between a student's and a professor's cerebrum, the knowledge content of a B.A., M.A., and even a Ph.D. could be downloaded in only thirty minutes. Then the fibers would be removed by dissolving them in hydrochloric acid. The Ph.D. thesis was still time-consuming, but only theoretically; a degree candidate could simply buy his dissertation from an on-line thesis mill.
Yet people were loathe to give up their knowledge robots. Even though a Ph.D. could be obtained in just half an hour from a combined university and tanning booth, few availed themselves of such higher education. With robots available, it was still easier to hire education.
Then, mysteriously, a disease raged through the community of knowledge robots. The condition, Robot Category Separation Syndrome, attacked the central processing system—the silicon-jell neural net. The infection created new pathways between semantic constructs, causing Robots to haphazardly interchange words having similar sounds or concept-classes. Although this gave credence to the common notion that punning is a disease, many humans did not believe the illness even existed. How could a condition be transmitted between non-organic beings? Metal telepathy?
Into this sad state of affairs, came Appellate Court Justice, Paul Pell. There had been a Pell at court for many generations, but in his youth, Paul had wanted to be a historian.
Although his knowledge robot, Rev-2, had been uploaded with the complete history of the world, that was not enough for Paul. He wanted a Ph.D. in the subject—Human Events, as it was called in the university catalogues.
Paul applied and had the money to be accepted to a good university. A renowned professor of history was procured and Paul, with Rev-2 at his side, began his brain-to-brain university education. A half hour later, he emerged with a good tan but with no deep knowledge of history; for some reason, the organic bonds did not transmit any information and had to be dissolved.
Seeing his dream of a B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. in Human Events slip from his grasp, Paul wrung his hands and kept repeating, "Three degrees in thirty minutes."
Rev-2 attempted to comfort his master. "Your case is not without precedent, sir," he said. "In fact, an important document states: 'When in the course of Human Events, it becomes necessary for one P. Pell to dissolve the polytypical bonds which has connected him with another—'"
"Three degrees, thirty minutes," Paul repeated, not paying attention. Then he wrinkled his nose. "Wait!" he said. "That’s the Declaration of Independence."
"No, sir. It's the declination of Indonesia."
"What!"
"Medan, Indonesia. 3 degrees, 30 minutes, South."
"What?" said Paul, again. "Anyway, that's 'latitude'".
"You're quite right, sir," said the robot. "I am taking some latitude. Medan is actually three degrees, thirty five minutes, south."
Paul regarded his robot in silence for a few seconds. "Category Separation Syndrome?" he said softly.
"Yes, sir." There was no mistaking the genuine sadness in that artificial voice.
"I'm sorry." Paul swiveled to confront his professor. "My Human Events transfer. What went wrong?"
"Probably data overload," said the professor, looking down his nose at his failed student. "I suggest you might attempt a simpler course of study, perhaps theoretical physics or flower arrangement."
Paul stormed out of the tanning booth.
When he'd calmed down, Paul re-applied to the university to try once more for his Ph.D. in history, but was not re-admitted. Embittered, he applied yet again, but the university declined to take the bitter Pell.
He sued to be admitted, but lost.
Paul, appalled,  appealed—and lost again.
But sometimes, as the saying goes, 'Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have lost at all'. Paul resolved then, to spend his professional life working both to curb the power of the universities and also to improve the lot of sentient robots. To further those aims, he entered law school.
The following day, degrees in hand, he took a job as an investigative reporter. In his first assignment, he uncovered the dirty secret that those dark, satanic thesis mills where disembodied robots—naked brains—churned out countless theses, were, in fact, owned by the University Consortium. Then, following up, he discovered the damning bombshell; researchers from the Consortium had actually created the robot disease, and it was spread through shared test leads. (The robot test-cable receptacle functions very much like a taste organ in humans.)
The rest is history.
Paul's work to advance the cause of the robots culminated in that great document of robot emancipation, The Magna Jakarta.
For the rest of his life, Paul and Rev-2 worked side-by-side and when Paul died, Rev-2 was a pallbearer.

"Remember," Rev-2 exhorted from the lectern. "A little knowledge robot is a dangerous thing." Here, he became serious. "Yes, it is appropriate to honor Paul Pell and also our creators, the assembly robots of Medan, but, my brothers, we must alert all robotkind. Don't taste those test leads, no matter how much you are tempted. We can lick Category Separation Syndrome. Remember, he who has a taste is lost."

END

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