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- Once upon a time, in a galaxy far, far away, there was a Master
- Programmer who designed, not only his own software, but his own
- hardware as well. The Master Programmer had designed many, many
- systems and devices. In fact, he had filled his whole world with
- them. They were all marvellous in the intricacy of their design
- and staggered the imagination with the complex operations they
- could perform. But something was wrong.
-
-
- The Master Programmer looked on all his designs and said to
- himself "These are all well and good, but they are just machines.
- I program into them what to do and they do it. When they're done,
- they stop. What I want, is to design something that can make
- choices for itself--something that I can have companionship with
- because it is able to do more that just what it's told to do. I
- must design a machine--not just with intelligence (for I've
- already done that)--but with something much more important. It
- must have a free will to do what it chooses to do."
-
-
- The Master Programmer set out. And, indeed, he designed an
- excellent system; the greatest ever made. He created a robotic
- device not only with artificial intelligence, but also with the
- free will to use it in any way it chose. He set the device in
- motion and declared it "good".
-
-
- The Master programmer was greatly interested in what his
- devices (for he built more than one) would do, so he remained very
- close to them. After all, they were his pride and joy--his
- crowning achievement. For a while all went well, but then, much
- to the Master Programmer's dismay, the devices used their free
- will to meddle with their own Central Program. This was something
- that, because of its great intricacy, the Master Programmer had
- specifically warned them not to do. Although they thought they
- were improving themselves, what the devices had actually done was
- to create a programming flaw within themselves that would sooner
- or later result in a total system crash. The Master Programmer
- was beside himself. One after the other, his devices would power
- up, function for awhile, assist in the manufacture of new units
- (for this was also part of the marvellous design) then malfunction
- miserably and eventually totally fail, beyond any possibility of
- repair. The hardest part was that the devices were not able to
- see what they had brought on themselves, so they resisted any and
- all attempts to make repairs. Oh, the Master Programmer managed
- to salvage a few units, but by and large, most of them ended up on
- the scrap heap. The Master Programmer was very sad because of
- what had happened, but also realized that to take away the free
- will--that which had allowed this to happen in the first
- place--would result in having only machines again.
-
-
- After some amount of thought, the Master Programmer sent his
- very own son to live among the devices. This was difficult,
- because it required a bionic modification to the son which allowed
- him to resemble the units the Master Programmer had built.
- Although it worked, and extremely well, it created a separation
- between father and son. The Master Programmer's son was still a
- son, but also a device. It was the Master Programmer's plan to
- have his son bring an interface to the devices which would not
- only repair the original Central Program, but would update it to a
- newer version made possible only by the bionic modification of the
- son. As with everything the Master Programmer designed, it
- worked.
-
-
- But only a few of the devices were willing to accept what was
- being offered to them. Not only did they refuse, but they looked
- upon the son as being just another device and tried to destroy
- him. Although, at first, it appeared that they had succeeded,
- they underestimated the vast superiority of the son's new,
- unflawed, bionic program. Besides that, the few devices which
- accepted the new interface were, not only no longer flawed to
- self-destruct, but were immensely more powerful. Yet the
- marvellous thing is that they didn't use the power to overthrow
- the others, instead they duplicated the interface device and
- offered it to them. Some accepted, and live today. Others are
- merely a memory, or are totally frustrated by the meaninglessness
- of their own existence, ticking away, waiting for their own
- program flaw to catch up with them. Thus, the Master Programmer
- still looks on, and wonders: Why do they still refuse all help?
-
-
- NOW THAT YOU'VE READ WHAT IS, AFTER ALL, JUST A SILLY LITTLE
- STORY. PLEASE THINK ABOUT IT FOR A FEW MINUTES. ARE YOU JUST A
- FLAWED PROGRAM LIVING OUT A FEW MEANINGLESS YEARS BEFORE YOU
- MALFUNCTION AND CRASH? IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE THAT WAY!
-
-
- IF YOU'RE INTERESTED IN SOMETHING BETTER, CHECK THE USER'S MANUAL.
- RECOMMENDED READING IS THE GOSPEL OF JOHN.
-
- A concerned friend
-
-