|  |       Science Fiction 
DictionaryA  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z
 Latest ByCategory:
 
 Armor
 Artificial
            Intelligence
 Biology
 Clothing
 Communication
 Computers
 Culture
 Data Storage
 Displays
 Engineering
 Entertainment
 Food
 Input Devices
 Lifestyle
 Living Space
 Manufacturing
 Material
 Media
 Medical
 Miscellaneous
 Robotics
 Security
 Space Tech
 Spacecraft
 Surveillance
 Transportation
 Travel
 Vehicle
 Virtual
              Person
 Warfare
 Weapon
 Work
 
 
"We each live in a somewhat unique world of our own psychological content."- Philip K. Dick
 
 |  | 
        
          |  | Automatized Factory |  |  
          |  | A factory consisting of machines with imposed human abilities. |  |   
	   
        
          | Nobody was in sight. By itself, that was not so very odd—the automatized factory had never had very many persons in it. But Burckhardt remembered, from his single visit, the endless, ceaseless busyness of the plant, the valves that opened and closed, the vats that emptied themselves and filled themselves and stirred and cooked and chemically tasted the bubbling liquids they held inside themselves. The plant was never populated, but it was never still.
Only—now it was still. Except for the distant sounds, there was no breath of life in it. The captive electronic minds were sending out no commands; the coils and relays were at rest.
Burckhardt said, "Come on." Swanson reluctantly followed him through the tangled aisles of stainless steel columns and tanks. 
They walked as though they were in the presence of the dead. In a way, they were, for what were the automatons that once had run the factory, if not corpses? The machines were controlled by computers that were really not computers at all, but the electronic analogues of living brains. And if they were turned off, were they not dead? For each had once been a human mind.
 
Take a master petroleum chemist, infinitely skilled in the separation of crude oil into its fractions. Strap him down, probe into his brain with searching electronic needles. The machine scans the patterns of the mind, translates what it sees into charts and sine waves. Impress these same waves on a robot computer and you have your chemist. Or a thousand copies of your chemist, if you wish, with all of his knowledge and skill, and no human limitations at all.
 
Put a dozen copies of him into a plant and they will run it all, twenty-four hours a day, seven days of every week, never tiring, never overlooking anything, never forgetting....
 |  
          | Technovelgy from The Tunnel Under The World,
              by Frederik Pohl. Published by Galaxy Science Fiction in 1955
 Additional resources -
 
           
          
           |  Compare to the autofac from the 1955 Philip K. Dick story.  Comment/Join this discussion  ( 0 ) | RSS/XML | Blog This | Additional
          resources:More Ideas
and Technology from The Tunnel Under The World
 More Ideas
and Technology by Frederik Pohl
 Tech news articles related to The Tunnel Under The World
 Tech news articles related to works by Frederik Pohl
 
      Articles related to Manufacturing Want to Contribute an
      Item?
    It's easy:Get the name of the item, a
quote, the book's name and the author's name, and Add 
it here.
         |  |       Science Fiction 
        Timeline1600-1899
 1900-1939
 1940's   1950's
 1960's   1970's
 1980's   1990's
 2000's   2010's
 
  More SF in the 
   News
 
  More Beyond Technovelgy  |  |