Profession by Isaac Asimov

(abelard.org)

89 points | by bkudria 9 hours ago

10 comments

  • mezyt 20 minutes ago
    Remind me of a recent discussion we had among Stackoverflow moderator:

    > “Think about it,” he continued. “Who discovers the edge cases the docs don’t mention? Who answers the questions that haven’t been asked before? It can’t be people trained only to repeat canonical answers. Somewhere, it has to stop. Somewhere, someone has to think.”

    > “Yes,” said the Moderator.

    > He leaned back. For a moment, restlessness flickered in his eyes.

    > “So why wasn’t I told this at the start?”

    > “If we told everyone,” said the Moderator gently, “we’d destroy the system. Most contributors must believe the goal is to fix their CRUD apps. They need closure. They need certainty. They need to get to be a Registered Something—Frontend, Backend, DevOps, Full stack. Only someone who suffered through the abuse of another moderator closing their novel question as a duplicate can be trusted to put enough effort to make an actual contribution”

  • spagettnet 6 hours ago
    • cdman 6 hours ago
      I haven't seen any ads on the site - I guess AdNauseum works well :)
    • catoc 3 hours ago
      Thanks - the OP’s site was a truly horrible experience
  • haritha-j 34 minutes ago
    Such a great ending. Really makes one wonder about the current AI hype of getting the machines to take over our work.
  • ameliaquining 5 hours ago
    This is my favorite Asimov story. It's got a protagonist with compelling motivations, a society that has problems but also convincing reasons why they persist, and a great ending.
    • zem 1 hour ago
      mine too, because one of my favourite sff tropes is that the more you regiment society, the more you rely on outsiders and those pushed to the edges for any real innovation.
  • elcapitan 1 hour ago
    Is this still in print, maybe as part of a collection? I tried to find it but couldn't. Many of his other works seem to be available as paperback, including a bunch of story collections.
    • kmaitreys 1 hour ago
      I have it in print. As part of Isaac Asimov: The Complete Stories Volume 1 (Published by Harper Voyager)
  • jimbob45 3 hours ago
    Dr Antonelli said, “Or do you believe that studying some subject will bend the brain cells in that direction, like that other theory that a pregnant woman need only listen to great music persistently to make a composer of her child. Do you believe that?”

    Apparently, Asimov was an early critic of the “Mozart in the womb” movement.

  • hnroo99 41 minutes ago
    What the hell that was a good read. Ending was great (though the last line did confuse me)
  • Aeglaecia 5 hours ago
    one of asimov's finest , a metaphor that continues to find relevance in my day to day existence - that the conclusions we so readily come to are assumptions made in the absence of the awareness of something more
  • dryarzeg 16 minutes ago
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  • four-taurus 16 minutes ago
    [dead]