Difference between revisions of "A Logic Named Joe"

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'''Leinster, Murray (pseud. of William F. Jenkins). "A Logic Named Joe."''' ''Astounding'' March 1946. Rpt. ''Modern Masterpieces in Science Fiction''. Sam Moskowitz, ed. Cleveland: World, 1965. Also rpt. ''Souls in Metal.'' Mike Ashley, compiler. New York: St. Martin's, 1977. New York: Jove-HBJ (Harcourt), 1978. ''Isaac Asimov Presents the Best of Science Fiction First''s. Isaac Asimov et al., eds. New York: Beaufort, 1984. [[Category: Fiction]]
 
'''Leinster, Murray (pseud. of William F. Jenkins). "A Logic Named Joe."''' ''Astounding'' March 1946. Rpt. ''Modern Masterpieces in Science Fiction''. Sam Moskowitz, ed. Cleveland: World, 1965. Also rpt. ''Souls in Metal.'' Mike Ashley, compiler. New York: St. Martin's, 1977. New York: Jove-HBJ (Harcourt), 1978. ''Isaac Asimov Presents the Best of Science Fiction First''s. Isaac Asimov et al., eds. New York: Beaufort, 1984. [[Category: Fiction]]
  
A "logic" (what we would call a computer terminal) becomes a self-conscious individual because of a minor mistake on the assembly line. Joe gets the other logics to give people all the data they might want, with amusing results for ML's readers but trouble for the human characters: logics are central to the civilization in the story, and the system can't be disconnected. In a brief mention, [[Astounding: John W. Campbell, Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, L. Ron Hubbard, and the Golden Age of Science Fiction|Alec Nevala-Lee]] see's "A Logic Named Joe" as "one of the few stories of any era to anticipate the Internet" (''Astounding …'' [2018], p. 245).
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A "logic" (what we would call a computer terminal) becomes a self-conscious individual because of a minor mistake on the assembly line. Joe gets the other logics to give people all the data they might want, with amusing results for ML's readers but trouble for the human characters: logics are central to the civilization in the story, and the system can't be disconnected. In a brief mention, [[Astounding: John W. Campbell, Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, L. Ron Hubbard, and the Golden Age of Science Fiction|Alec Nevala-Lee]] sees "A Logic Named Joe" as "one of the few stories of any era to anticipate the Internet" (''Astounding …'' [2018], p. 245).
  
  
  
Rev. RDE 15Sep19
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Small addition, RDE 15Sep19
 
[[Category: Fiction]]
 
[[Category: Fiction]]

Revision as of 02:00, 16 September 2019

Leinster, Murray (pseud. of William F. Jenkins). "A Logic Named Joe." Astounding March 1946. Rpt. Modern Masterpieces in Science Fiction. Sam Moskowitz, ed. Cleveland: World, 1965. Also rpt. Souls in Metal. Mike Ashley, compiler. New York: St. Martin's, 1977. New York: Jove-HBJ (Harcourt), 1978. Isaac Asimov Presents the Best of Science Fiction Firsts. Isaac Asimov et al., eds. New York: Beaufort, 1984.

A "logic" (what we would call a computer terminal) becomes a self-conscious individual because of a minor mistake on the assembly line. Joe gets the other logics to give people all the data they might want, with amusing results for ML's readers but trouble for the human characters: logics are central to the civilization in the story, and the system can't be disconnected. In a brief mention, Alec Nevala-Lee sees "A Logic Named Joe" as "one of the few stories of any era to anticipate the Internet" (Astounding … [2018], p. 245).


Small addition, RDE 15Sep19