When Roald Dahl Wrote a Story Predicting the Rise of ChatGPT and Other AI Large Language Models (1954)

Most of us who know the work of Roald Dahl grew up with it, even­tu­al­ly com­ing to con­sid­er the man a mas­ter of imag­i­na­tive, often grotesque tales for chil­dren. A bit lat­er on, when we heard that he’d also writ­ten books for adults, with titles like Kiss Kiss and Switch Bitch, some of us sought them out as a kind of for­bid­den lit­er­ary fruit. What tends to escape notice is that he also wrote for teenagers — or, in any case, that cer­tain of his sto­ries were pack­aged for teenagers into the posthu­mous vol­ume The Great Auto­mat­ic Gramma­ti­za­tor, whose title sto­ry has gained a new rel­e­vance in our age of Chat­G­PT, as explained in the new Tibees video above.

First pub­lished in 1954, “The Great Auto­mat­ic Gramma­ti­za­tor” con­cerns an enor­mous­ly com­plex, whol­ly ana­log machine that can gen­er­ate page after page of text at a then-unimag­in­able clip. Its inven­tor, a beat­en-down young cor­po­rate employ­ee called Adolph Knipe, designs it based on the same prin­ci­ples he’d used to cre­ate an elec­tric cal­cu­la­tor that pleased his boss, Mr. Bohlen. A frus­trat­ed writer of fic­tion by night, Knipe con­ceives of the Gramma­ti­za­tor as a tool of revenge against the mag­a­zine indus­try that spurned him. With the com­pa­ny’s back­ing to build the thing, he tells Bohlen, they could dom­i­nate the mar­ket for short sto­ries almost with­out effort — and make their own pres­ti­gious names as authors to boot.

“It stands to rea­son that an engine built along the lines of the elec­tric com­put­er could be adjust­ed to arrange words (instead of num­bers) in their right order accord­ing to the rules of gram­mar,” Dahl writes. “Give it the verbs, the nouns, the adjec­tives, the pro­nouns, store them in the mem­o­ry sec­tion as a vocab­u­lary, and arrange for them to be extract­ed as required. Then feed it with plots and leave it to write the sen­tences.” Though Bohlen accepts the tech­ni­cal propo­si­tion, he at first doubts the com­mer­cial one, at least until his employ­ee informs him that mag­a­zines like the Sat­ur­day Evening Post, Collier’s, and Ladies’ Home Jour­nal will pay for a sto­ry “any­thing up to twen­ty-five hun­dred dol­lars”: near­ly $40,000 today.

Of course, 1954 was a dif­fer­ent time. Today, the Sat­ur­day Evening Post, Collier’s, and Ladies’ Home Jour­nal have all gone, as has the prospect of earn­ing even a mea­ger liv­ing through short sto­ries. And a com­put­er of this kind, as Dahl describes it, would have been an enor­mous, noisy device laden with but­tons, dials, ped­als, and stops, each of which the “writer” would use to con­trol such vari­ables as theme, style, ten­sion, humor, and pas­sion. “The qual­i­ty may be infe­ri­or,” an increas­ing­ly pow­er-mad Knipe admits of the machine’s out­put, “but that doesn’t mat­ter. It’s the cost of pro­duc­tion that counts.” All of us now pos­sess Gramma­ti­za­tors of our own, far faster, cheap­er, more ver­sa­tile, and eas­i­er to use than any­thing Roald Dahl could have imag­ined. Yet how many of us can hope to be read more than 70 years in the future?

via Metafil­ter

Relat­ed con­tent:

How George Orwell Pre­dict­ed the Rise of “AI Slop” in Nine­teen Eighty-Four (1949)

Sci-Fi Writer Arthur C. Clarke Pre­dict­ed the Rise of Arti­fi­cial Intel­li­gence & the Exis­ten­tial Ques­tions We Would Need to Answer (1978)

Roald Dahl Gives a Tour of the Small Back­yard Hut Where He Wrote All of His Beloved Children’s Books

Read a Nev­er Pub­lished, “Sub­ver­sive” Chap­ter from Roald Dahl’s Char­lie and the Choco­late Fac­to­ry

Roald Dahl, Who Lost His Daugh­ter to Measles, Writes a Heart­break­ing Let­ter about Vac­ci­na­tions: “It Is Almost a Crime to Allow Your Child to Go Unim­mu­nised”

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.


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