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The Nine Billion Names of God

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Country
  
United Kingdom

Originally published
  
February 1953

Genre
  
Science Fiction

4.1/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
1953

Author
  
Arthur C. Clarke

Publication type
  
Anthology

The Nine Billion Names of God imagesgrassetscombooks1224576760l149075jpg

Published in
  
Star Science Fiction Stories No.1

Awards
  
Retro Hugo Award for Best Short Story

Similar
  
Arthur C Clarke books, Other books

The nine billion names of god arthur c clark av book audiobook videobook ebook


"The Nine Billion Names of God" is a 1953 science fiction short story by Arthur C. Clarke. The story was among the stories selected in 1970 by the Science Fiction Writers of America as one of the best science fiction short stories published before the creation of the Nebula Awards. It was published in The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One, 1929–1964.

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 for this purpose, and that 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 9,000,000,000 ("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 15,000 years; the monks wish to use modern technology 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 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. Then they notice that "overhead, without any fuss, the stars were going out."

Reception

In 2004, "The Nine Billion Names of God" won the retrospective Hugo Award for Best Short Story for the year 1954. Kirkus Reviews called it "quietly remarkable" and the Guardian considered it to be a "wonderful apocalyptic rib-tickler"; however, Gary K. Wolfe noted that it is "patently at odds with Clarke's scientific rationalism". Paul J. Nahin has pointed out that, due to the delay imposed by the speed of light, an omniscient God would have had to destroy all the stars in the universe years earlier so that their "synchronized vanishing" would be visible at exactly the time that the monks completed their task.

In 2003, Clarke reported having been told that the Dalai Lama had found the story "very amusing".

Publication history

  • 1953 – in Star Science Fiction Stories
  • 1958 – in The Other Side of the Sky
  • 1962 – in The Mathematical Magpie
  • 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.

    1. ISBN 0-945353-44-8
    2. ISBN 978-0-945353-44-7

    References

    The Nine Billion Names of God Wikipedia