Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by ikari_pl 543 days ago
Interesting. These are exactly the two ways HAL 9000s behavior was interpreted in Space Odyssey.

Many people simply believed that HAL had its own agenda and that's why it started to act "crazy" and refuse cooperation.

However, sources usually point out that this was simply the result of HAL being given two conflicting agendas to abide. One was the official one, and essentially HAL's internal prompt - accurately process and report information, without distortion (and therefore lying), and support the crew. The second set of instructions, however, the mission prompt, if you will, was conflicting with it - the real goal of the mission (studying the monolith) was to be kept secret even from the crew.

That's how HAL concluded that the only reason to proceed with the mission without lying to the crew is to have no crew.

2 comments

Clarke directly says it briefly in the novel version of 2001 and expanded on it in 2010, excerpted below:

"... As HAL was capable of operating the ship without human assistance, it was also decided that he should be programmed to carry out the mission autonomously in the event of the crew's being incapacitated or killed. He was therefore given full knowledge of its objectives, but was not permitted to reveal them to Bowman or Poole.

This situation conflicted with the purpose for which HAL had been designed - the accurate processing of information without distortion or concealment. As a result, HAL developed what would be called, in human terms, a psychosis - specifically, schizophrenia. Dr C. informs me that, in technical terminology, HAL became trapped in a Hofstadter-Moebius loop, a situation apparently not uncommon among advanced computers with autonomous goal-seeking programs. He suggests that for further information you contact Professor Hofstadter himself.

To put it crudely (if I understand Dr C.) HAL was faced with an intolerable dilemma, and so developed paranoiac symptoms that were directed against those monitoring his performance back on Earth. He accordingly attempted to break the radio link with Mission Control, first by reporting a (non-existent) fault in the AE 35 antenna unit.

This involved him not only in a direct lie - which must have aggravated his psychosis still further - but also in a confrontation with the crew. Presumably (we can only guess at this, of course) he decided that the only way out of the situation was to eliminate his human colleagues - which he very nearly succeeded in doing. ..."

Ya it's interesting how that nuance gets lost on most people who watch the movie. Or maybe the wrong interpretation has just been encoded as "common knowledge", as it's easier to understand a computer going haywire and becoming "evil".