- The Nine Billion Names of God
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This article is about the short story. For the short story collection, see The Nine Billion Names of God (collection).
"The Nine Billion Names of God" Author Arthur C. Clarke Country United Kingdom Language English Genre(s) Science fiction Published in Star Science Fiction Stories No.1 Publication type anthology Publication date 1953 "The Nine Billion Names of God" is a 1953 science fiction short story by Arthur C. Clarke. The story was the winner (in 2004) of the retrospective Hugo Award for Best Short Story for the year 1954.
Contents
Plot summary
This short story tells of a Tibetan lamasery whose monks seek to list all of the names of God, since they believe the Universe was created in order to note all the names of God and once this naming is completed, God will bring the Universe to an end. Three centuries ago, the monks created an alphabet in which they calculated they could encode all the possible names of God, numbering about nine billion and each having no more than nine characters. Writing the names out by hand, as they had been doing, even after eliminating various nonsense combinations, would take another fifteen thousand years; the monks wish to use modern technology in order to finish this task more quickly.
They rent a computer capable of printing all the possible permutations, and they hire two Westerners to install and program the machine. The computer operators are skeptical but play along. After three months, as the job nears completion, they fear that the monks will blame the computer, and by extension its operators, when nothing happens. The Westerners delay the operation of the computer so that it will complete its final print run just after their scheduled departure. After their successful departure on ponies, they pause on the mountain path on their way back to the airfield, where a plane is waiting to take them back to civilization. Under a clear starlit night sky they estimate that it must be just about the time that the monks are pasting the final printed names into their holy books. They notice that "overhead, without any fuss, the stars were going out."
Publication history
- 1953 - in Star Science Fiction Stories
- 1958 - in The Other Side of the Sky
- 1967 - in The Nine Billion Names of God (collection)
- Reprint: Amereon, Ltd., 1996. ISBN 0-8488-2181-5
A cassette tape was released of Clarke himself reading the story. It may be the one released in 1989.
See also
- Names of God
- Towers of Hanoi, a puzzle that mentions a similar story
- "The Library of Babel", a short story which also deals with collecting all the possible permutations of a character string
Notes
External links
- The Nine Billion Names of God publication history at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- The Nine Billion Names of God at BestScienceFictionStories.com - short story reviews and resources.
- James Randi praising The Nine Billion Names of God as his favourite Clarke story Audio interview the day after Clarke's death.
Hugo Award for Best Short Story (1946–1960) Retro Hugos "Uncommon Sense" by Hal Clement (1946) · "To Serve Man" by Damon Knight (1951) · "The Nine Billion Names of God" by Arthur C. Clarke (1954)
1955–1960 "Allamagoosa" by Eric Frank Russell (1955) · "The Star" by Arthur C. Clarke (1956) · "Or All the Seas with Oysters" by Avram Davidson (1958) · "That Hell-Bound Train" by Robert Bloch (1959) · "Flowers for Algernon" by Daniel Keyes (1960)
Complete list · 1946–1960 · 1961–1980 · 1981–2000 · 2001–present
Categories:- Short stories by Arthur C. Clarke
- 1953 short stories
- Hugo Award Winners for Best Short Story
- Apocalyptic fiction
- Religion in science fiction
- Names of God in literature and fiction
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