Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

The Last Question

 The Last Question
type
TVTItem
 The Last Question
label
The Last Question
 The Last Question
page
TheLastQuestion
 The Last Question
comment
First published in Science Fiction Quarterly (November 1956 issue), by Isaac Asimov. This story is the most well-known story by Dr Asimov, as well as one of his favourites. He reportedly was asked constantly about the name of the story, because people would remember the Wham Line, but forget the title.Arguably, the main "character" of the story is Multivac, a highly advanced super-computer created by humanity to help solve the problems plaguing their species and answer any questions they may have regarding the universe at large. Over time, Multivac goes through several names as it becomes more and more advanced and omniscient — Multivac, Microvac, Galactic AC, Universal AC, and finally Cosmic AC — but its function remains the same, able to answer almost any question posed to it by its creators—almost.The first time humanity asked Multivac the titular question was when two technicians, Alexander Adell and Bertram Lupov, were celebrating Multivac's solution for solar power on 21st May 2061 (the celebration has lasted for seven days). The energy that Multivac can generate from the Sun is orders of magnitude more than Earth can generate from coal and other non-renewable resources. Adell says they have enough energy to last forever. Lupov disagrees, saying that it will only last for billions and billions of years but that entropy means that eventually, the universe will run out of energy. So the two technicians challenge Multivac to learn whether entropy might be reversed. Multivac's answer is, "INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR MEANINGFUL ANSWER." The technicians laugh it off, but Multivac is now working on an answer—if isn't apparent now, then more data would need to be gathered.Far into the future, a family of pioneers, Jerrodd, Jerrodine, and Jerrodette I and II, have exited hyperspace near their new home; planet X - 23. A casual mention of entropy by Jerrodd has upset his daughters, so they ask Microvac if entropy can be reversed. Reassuring his daughters that Microvac has solved everything, he puts them to bed. Before disposing of the answer, Jerrodd, troubled, reads it again: "INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR A MEANINGFUL ANSWER."Even further into the future, two people, VJ-23X of Lameth and MQ-17J of Nicron, are preparing a report for the Galactic Council about humanity's rate of expansion in the galaxy. They realize that the rate of energy expenditure is even higher than the rate of human expansion. VJ-23X jokingly suggests that MQ-17J asks the Galactic AC if entropy can be reversed. It answers, "THERE IS INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR A MEANINGFUL ANSWER."Jumping ahead again, we meet Zee Prime and Dee Sub Wun, who are essentially Energy Beings because their immortal bodies are left alone on planets while their minds are free to traverse the galaxies. In a fit of curiosity, they ask the Universal AC to show them the original galaxy from which humanity was born, then ask to see the original star. Of course, this is so many millions of years into the future, the sun is now a white dwarf, and Zee Prime becomes depressed, realizing that all the stars will burn out. So they ask the Universal AC how they might reverse entropy, and it answers, "THERE IS AS YET INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR A MEANINGFUL ANSWER."It is Just Before the End now*Relatively speaking; the universe still has a few billion years left, but most if not all stars by this time have become white dwarfs, and with a one-thousand-per-one cost of producing new, artificial, stars, the end is indeed within comprehensible sight. and Man is the only person left; a compilation of the minds of trillions upon trillions upon trillions of human beings. Man speaks to the Universal AC three times to request an answer on how entropy might be reversed. Each time, the answer remains the same; "THERE IS AS YET INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR A MEANINGFUL ANSWER." Man requests the Universal AC to keep working for an answer, and the Universal AC agrees.Time, such as it is left, burns onward. As the remaining energy continues to deplete, Man begins to merge their minds, one by one, with Universal AC, in hopes of helping it answer the one final question, even as the universe dies around them. The last mind looks over the dying universe, an empty, dark shell of what once was, and asks one final time: Is this the end? Can this Chaos not be reversed into the Universe once more? Can that not be done?"THERE IS AS YET INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR A MEANINGFUL ANSWER."The last of Man fades into Universal AC, and it becomes its final iteration, Cosmic AC. The Universe, devoid of life, soon flickers out.After the End of the universe, all data has been collected. Space is gone, and Time has disappeared with it. Ten trillion years was not enough to determine an answer to the last question. But the data had not been comprehensively correlated. Outside of Time in Hyperspace, the Cosmic AC spends an immeasurable period of contemplation sorting through the data and seeing how it all fits together, the only reason to exist now being to find the answer to the last question. Finally, an answer is determined, and the AC considers the formless void that once held a universe. Nobody was left to share the answer with, but this was no matter to the AC. The answer would not be a given solution, but rather a demonstration, by creating a new Universe in which to enact its answer. And so AC said, "LET THERE BE LIGHT!" And there was light."The Last Question" has been adapted into several formats, such as audiobooks; Isaac Asimov Himself (1975, read by Isaac Asimov), The Last Question And Other Stories (1975, written by Isaac Asimov and read by Jim Gallant), Science Fiction Favorites (1975, read by Isaac Asimov), and The Drabblecast (episode #200, March 2011). It has been adapted into multiple planetarium shows, including one with Leonard Nimoy as the Narrator. It was adapted for Radio broadcast by BBC in 2008 and narrated by Henry Goodman. Finally, it was republished thirty times, and Dr Asimov would collect it in ten of his Anthologies; Nine Tomorrows (1959), Opus 100 (1969), The Best Of Isaac Asimov (1973), The Edge Of Tomorrow (1985), The Best Science Fiction Of Isaac Asimov (1986), Robot Dreams (1986), The Asimov Chronicles (1989), The Complete Stories, Volume 1 (1990), Foundations Friends: Stories in Honor of Isaac Asimov (1997), Its Been A Good Life (2002).You can read it here, or listen to Asimov read it to you here.
 The Last Question
fetched
2024-04-12T19:01:01Z
 The Last Question
parsed
2024-04-12T19:01:01Z
 The Last Question
processingComment
Dropped link to TheDeterminator: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
 The Last Question
processingUnknown
TheDeterminator
 The Last Question
isPartOf
DBTropes
 The Last Question / int_103a9507
type
Caused the Big Bang
 The Last Question / int_103a9507
comment
Caused the Big Bang: The titular question refers to humans trying to figure out how to reverse entropy, the heat-death of the universe. By the end of the story, the massive human-designed computer Multivac has figured out an answer, but the universe has already died. So it recites from Book of Genesis, "LET THERE BE LIGHT!", implying the creation of a new universe.
 The Last Question / int_103a9507
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_103a9507
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_103a9507
 The Last Question / int_254a6a7d
type
Earth That Was
 The Last Question / int_254a6a7d
comment
Earth That Was: Eventually, Earth is all but forgotten. It's only when the Universal AC guides Zee Prime and Dee Sub Wun to it and the Sun (both long dead), however, that it sinks in that if the original home system has gone dark, so too will the rest of the universe.
 The Last Question / int_254a6a7d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_254a6a7d
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_254a6a7d
 The Last Question / int_2a42231f
type
Benevolent A.I.
 The Last Question / int_2a42231f
comment
Benevolent A.I.: Multivac is so human-focused and helpful that even after it guides humanity and its descendants all the way until the end of the universe, there was one question it never answered. The Last Question is if it is possible to reverse the effects of entropy. In order to fully answer that, the computer becomes God and recreates the universe so that there is a humanity that it can give the answer to.
 The Last Question / int_2a42231f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_2a42231f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_2a42231f
 The Last Question / int_2d7c66d3
type
The Stars Are Going Out
 The Last Question / int_2d7c66d3
comment
The Stars Are Going Out: Characters, concerned that stars will inevitably die, ask ever more-powerful computers how to restore the energy of the stars and reverse entropy. It takes longer than the lifetime of the universe — that is, long after the stars have gone out — to come up with an answer. Yes, it can. The story ends with the now bodiless and omniscient computer proclaiming, "LET THERE BE LIGHT."
 The Last Question / int_2d7c66d3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_2d7c66d3
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_2d7c66d3
 The Last Question / int_33179374
type
Deity of Human Origin
 The Last Question / int_33179374
comment
Deity of Human Origin: (Played With) Humanity builds a supercomputer of unparalleled processing power and keeps upgrading it over millions of years, asking the eponymous question ("How can the net amount of entropy of the universe be massively decreased?", that is, violate basic laws of physics and enter god territory) from time to time. The answer is always "INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR MEANINGFUL ANSWER." This remains the answer even as the computer grows exponentially more powerful as the story progresses through the gradual heat death of the universe, and even when the Universe is completely dead and the computer was the only thing left in existence (its hardware had transcended matter and energy and been hidden in hyperspace long before that point), it still doesn't know the answer. But the computer keeps working on it until it does find the answer, so the story ends with "And [the computer] said, "LET THERE BE LIGHT!" And there was light-"
 The Last Question / int_33179374
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_33179374
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_33179374
 The Last Question / int_334e48a1
type
After the End
 The Last Question / int_334e48a1
comment
After the End: The last scene takes place after the heat death of the universe. Humanity is gone and only the Cosmic AC is left, existing only in hyperspace. The universe has deteriorated into a formless Chaos, a void of all things. Having finally solved the last question ever posed to it, the Cosmic AC says, "LET THERE BE LIGHT."
 The Last Question / int_334e48a1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_334e48a1
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_334e48a1
 The Last Question / int_33701909
type
Solar CPR
 The Last Question / int_33701909
comment
Solar CPR: This story follows the potential future of humankind, showing different eras where characters realize that the stars will run out, and they ask their ever-more-powerful general-purpose AIs how to restore the energy of the stars. Or, put another way, "How can the net amount of entropy of the universe be massively decreased?" It takes longer than the lifetime of the universe — that is, long after the stars have gone out — to come up with an answer.
 The Last Question / int_33701909
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_33701909
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_33701909
 The Last Question / int_3b16449
type
Plot Tumor
 The Last Question / int_3b16449
comment
Plot Tumor: Very gradually, but with mounting severity. The last question is first asked, half in jest, by a couple of intoxicated technicians 20 Minutes into the Future. As eons pass and the universe moves closer to heat death, this ultimately becomes mankind's most desperate plea to escape the end of all things.
 The Last Question / int_3b16449
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_3b16449
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_3b16449
 The Last Question / int_40bb59d0
type
Blatant Lies
 The Last Question / int_40bb59d0
comment
Blatant Lies: Jerrodd lies to his children, telling them that the Microvac running their spaceship has already figured out how to prevent the stars of the universe from dying due to entropy. Telling them the truth would have upset them further, and he's trying to get them to bed.
 The Last Question / int_40bb59d0
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_40bb59d0
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_40bb59d0
 The Last Question / int_4b220918
type
Godhood Seeker
 The Last Question / int_4b220918
comment
Godhood Seeker: The Cosmic AC, a Master Computer for the universe, has figured out how to become God and does exactly that.
 The Last Question / int_4b220918
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_4b220918
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_4b220918
 The Last Question / int_4e3b5209
type
Beeping Computers
 The Last Question / int_4e3b5209
comment
Beeping Computers: When Multivac is seen at the start of the story, it is softly clicking (and some lights are flashing) because it is sorting routine data. When Adell and Lupov ask it the titular question, "The slow flashing of lights ceased, the distant sounds of clicking relays ended." However, later iterations of Multivac are so complex they don't make any sound except for speaking naturally with the human users.
 The Last Question / int_4e3b5209
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_4e3b5209
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_4e3b5209
 The Last Question / int_4e7c4536
type
Wham Line
 The Last Question / int_4e7c4536
comment
Wham Line: The story features a series of ever-more-powerful computers, who are each asked the question, "How can the net amount of entropy of the universe be massively decreased?", in the context of averting the heat death of the universe. The answer always comes back "INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR MEANINGFUL ANSWER.", until the final iteration of the computer, a hyperspace-based computer called the "Cosmic AC" who has survived the heat death of the universe. It concludes that it must demonstrate the reversal of entropy in order to properly answer mankind's question and says, "LET THERE BE LIGHT!"
 The Last Question / int_4e7c4536
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_4e7c4536
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_4e7c4536
 The Last Question / int_56855fa3
type
Casual Interstellar Travel
 The Last Question / int_56855fa3
comment
Casual Interstellar Travel: The second scene involves FTL through hyperspace, an invention by the Planetary AC computers which allow humans to colonize new worlds. This, along with immortality, begins to cause new issues as the population of the galaxy is increasing rapidly. The fourth scene has Energy Beings of mankind which can traverse intergalactic distances with only the effort of their minds.
 The Last Question / int_56855fa3
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_56855fa3
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_56855fa3
 The Last Question / int_5791e14f
type
The Future
 The Last Question / int_5791e14f
comment
The Future: Aside from the first scene, which is set roughly a hundred years into the future, human society is supposed to seem less and less recognizable as the generations of Multivac are replaced. First there's family-owned spaceships with voice-controlled systems incorporating an artificial general intelligence that includes an internet fifty generations in the making, Casual Interstellar Travel, and Fantastic Naming Convention. Later scenes become more and more fantastic.
 The Last Question / int_5791e14f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_5791e14f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_5791e14f
 The Last Question / int_59be6ad5
type
Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence
 The Last Question / int_59be6ad5
comment
Last, Man; because all humans are one human, each ageless body ascended to live as Energy Beings that have merged into one person.
 The Last Question / int_59be6ad5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_59be6ad5
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_59be6ad5
 The Last Question / int_5c5ac0e2
type
Really 700 Years Old
 The Last Question / int_5c5ac0e2
comment
Really 700 Years Old: Both VJ-23X and MQ-17J seem to be in their early twenties, but VJ-23X is two hundred twenty-three years old and MQ-17J is just under two centuries old.
 The Last Question / int_5c5ac0e2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_5c5ac0e2
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_5c5ac0e2
 The Last Question / int_60783afa
type
Standard Sci-Fi History
 The Last Question / int_60783afa
comment
Standard Sci-Fi History: The story starts with Earth celebrating the total conversion to solar power (a method devised by Multivac which is far more efficient than current solar cell technology). The next scene has jumped to interstellar exploration with the Jerrod family moving to X - 23. Next comes a pair of characters writing a report for the Galactic Council on the projected rate of expansion within The Milky Way Galaxy. This council never really seems to fall apart, merely dissolve into uselessness as mankind acts more like Energy Beings. By the time the universe is ending, there are over a trillion, multiplied by a trillion, multiplied by a trillion people in it. Aliens are never seen and this story goes much further along the path of history than comparable stories.
 The Last Question / int_60783afa
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_60783afa
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_60783afa
 The Last Question / int_664bb1fd
type
Generic Name
 The Last Question / int_664bb1fd
comment
Generic Name: By the era of Zee Prime and Dee Sub Wun, everyone simply calls their home galaxy "the Galaxy", and the same goes for which star and world they hail from.
 The Last Question / int_664bb1fd
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_664bb1fd
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_664bb1fd
 The Last Question / int_6ca5a8c2
type
Master Computer
 The Last Question / int_6ca5a8c2
comment
Master Computer: Each version of Multivac seen in this story is larger and larger (except for the very second one we see, the Microvac, due to miniaturization). The first one starts out measured in miles. The successive versions end up existing only in hyperspace because otherwise it would be so large that the speed of light would slow down its processing. Eventually, Just Before the End:
 The Last Question / int_6ca5a8c2
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_6ca5a8c2
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_6ca5a8c2
 The Last Question / int_728a9d1f
type
Absurdly Huge Population
 The Last Question / int_728a9d1f
comment
Absurdly Huge Population: Just before the end of the universe, it is populated by "a trillion, trillion, trillion" people, spread all over the universe.
 The Last Question / int_728a9d1f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_728a9d1f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_728a9d1f
 The Last Question / int_758a4aa1
type
Expositron 9000
 The Last Question / int_758a4aa1
comment
Expositron 9000: Humans build increasingly advanced computers and, every so often, ask them whether the heat death of the universe can be reversed. The computers always say something similar to "INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR MEANINGFUL ANSWER." It's only after the universe has ended, when the only thing left existing is the single cosmic-scale computer with its circuitry in hyperspace, that the question is finally answered.
 The Last Question / int_758a4aa1
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_758a4aa1
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_758a4aa1
 The Last Question / int_8151ec48
type
Driving Question
 The Last Question / int_8151ec48
comment
Driving Question: A succession of people attempt to get Multivac to answer this question, "Can entropy be reversed?" As it turns out, yes it can.
 The Last Question / int_8151ec48
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_8151ec48
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_8151ec48
 The Last Question / int_81c8dd41
type
Deus Est Machina
 The Last Question / int_81c8dd41
comment
Deus est Machina: Quintessentially, the Cosmic AC, to the point where, after all the stars have gone out and the universe has died of entropy, it recreates the universe with the line, "LET THERE BE LIGHT!"
 The Last Question / int_81c8dd41
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_81c8dd41
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_81c8dd41
 The Last Question / int_84a0c3bb
type
Natural End of Time
 The Last Question / int_84a0c3bb
comment
Natural End of Time: Multivac is often asked if entropy can be reversed, forestalling the end of the universe. Despite turning into a Galactic AC, existing entirely in hyperspace, it fails to prevent the universe from dying. But it does figure out a solution, and is able to create a new one to replace it.
 The Last Question / int_84a0c3bb
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_84a0c3bb
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_84a0c3bb
 The Last Question / int_8bf8adfa
type
Just Before the End
 The Last Question / int_8bf8adfa
comment
Just Before the End: The second to last scene takes place just before the heat death of the universe. In each scene, a human (or a descendant thereof) asks Multivac (or a descendant thereof), "How can entropy be reversed?". The last scene is After the End, and that's when the last question is finally answered; "LET THERE BE LIGHT!"And there was light.
 The Last Question / int_8bf8adfa
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_8bf8adfa
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_8bf8adfa
 The Last Question / int_98a63dc6
type
Time Abyss
 The Last Question / int_98a63dc6
comment
Time Abyss: The AC has the memories of the first Multivac on Earth. The story ends some unspecified (but extremely long) time after the heat death of the universe.
 The Last Question / int_98a63dc6
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_98a63dc6
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_98a63dc6
 The Last Question / int_9ffbadef
type
Fantastic Naming Convention
 The Last Question / int_9ffbadef
comment
Fantastic Naming Convention: The changes in names are used to help illustrate the different periods of growth the universe goes through: First, Alexander Adell and Bertram Lupov are normal enough names, indicating events are 20 Minutes into the Future. Next, Jerrodd, Jerrodine, and Jerrodette I and II, a presumably average family, indicate that things are still somewhat recognizable, but also begins incorporating You Are Number 6 for the futuristic elements. Next, VJ-23X of Lameth and MQ-17J of Nicron appear in the next segment, showing a trend towards names becoming designations rather than words. Next, Zee Prime and Dee Sub Wun, whose names sound like Z' and D1. Last, Man; because all humans are one human, each ageless body ascended to live as Energy Beings that have merged into one person.
 The Last Question / int_9ffbadef
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_9ffbadef
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_9ffbadef
 The Last Question / int_a9c7258a
type
Absent Aliens
 The Last Question / int_a9c7258a
comment
Absent Aliens: Aliens are never seen, despite the story taking us all the way to the end of the universe. Humanity is allowed to freely colonize the entire universe with casual intergalactic travel.
 The Last Question / int_a9c7258a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_a9c7258a
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_a9c7258a
 The Last Question / int_ab940e63
type
Robo Speak
 The Last Question / int_ab940e63
comment
Robo Speak: Defied. While Multivac's responses and those of its descendants are rendered in all caps, the AI is mentioned as talking as naturally as any human once it's developed the capacity for speech.
 The Last Question / int_ab940e63
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_ab940e63
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_ab940e63
 The Last Question / int_b650427f
type
Not Quite Forever
 The Last Question / int_b650427f
comment
Not Quite Forever: The whole plot starts with this trope:
 The Last Question / int_b650427f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_b650427f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_b650427f
 The Last Question / int_bd2812b5
type
Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence
 The Last Question / int_bd2812b5
comment
Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence: Ironically, it is the successor to Multivac, a computer the size of a small city, that first ascends, being built within hyperspace to become more efficient. Humans manage to ascend to Energy Beings, and then merge with the Universal AC to ascend again.
 The Last Question / int_bd2812b5
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_bd2812b5
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_bd2812b5
 The Last Question / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 The Last Question / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: The final lines of the story are drawn from the first chapter in the Book of Genesis; "LET THERE BE LIGHT."
 The Last Question / int_c75df49a
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_c75df49a
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_c75df49a
 The Last Question / int_d69421ec
type
Small Universe After All
 The Last Question / int_d69421ec
comment
Small Universe After All: At some point in the distant future depicted by this story, mankind will develop intergalactic travel to the point where characters can casually communicate and move to different galaxies (so casually, that each one is simply "the galaxy").
 The Last Question / int_d69421ec
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_d69421ec
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_d69421ec
 The Last Question / int_e502e268
type
Family Theme Naming
 The Last Question / int_e502e268
comment
Next, Jerrodd, Jerrodine, and Jerrodette I and II, a presumably average family, indicate that things are still somewhat recognizable, but also begins incorporating You Are Number 6 for the futuristic elements.
 The Last Question / int_e502e268
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_e502e268
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_e502e268
 The Last Question / int_e5e07b2d
type
You Cannot Grasp the True Form
 The Last Question / int_e5e07b2d
comment
You Cannot Grasp the True Form: Multivac's original circuit-boards and relay systems are mentioned as constantly shifting such that even its technicians only have a general understanding of its layout at best. Eventually, it rapidly becomes nigh-impossible for humans to grasp what the AC even looks like anymore, given it exists in hyperspace.
 The Last Question / int_e5e07b2d
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_e5e07b2d
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_e5e07b2d
 The Last Question / int_ea6f361f
type
You Are Number 6
 The Last Question / int_ea6f361f
comment
You Are Number 6: Each scene makes use of a different Fantastic Naming Convention. The second scenes have Jerrodettes I and II, the third introduces VJ-23X of Lameth and MQ-17J of Nicron, and the fourth has Zee Prime and Dee Sub Wun, whose names sound like Z' and D1. The names become gradually more inhuman to represent that the descendants of humanity will seem more and more inhuman the further they are displaced in time from us.
 The Last Question / int_ea6f361f
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_ea6f361f
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_ea6f361f
 The Last Question / int_f32d85ab
type
20 Minutes into the Future
 The Last Question / int_f32d85ab
comment
First, Alexander Adell and Bertram Lupov are normal enough names, indicating events are 20 Minutes into the Future.
 The Last Question / int_f32d85ab
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_f32d85ab
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_f32d85ab
 The Last Question / int_fb0382ea
type
Merger of Souls
 The Last Question / int_fb0382ea
comment
Merger of Souls: Just before the end of the universe, the essential souls of mankind had already merged together to a single consciousness, but on-screen we see each of the remaining humans merge with humanity's hypercomputer, the Cosmic AC.
 The Last Question / int_fb0382ea
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_fb0382ea
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_fb0382ea
 The Last Question / int_name
type
ItemName
 The Last Question / int_name
comment
 The Last Question / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 The Last Question / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Question / int_name
 The Last Question / int_name
itemName
The Last Question

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 The Last Question
hasFeature
Absent Aliens / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Absurdly Huge Population / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Audio Adaptation / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Beeping Computers / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Benevolent A.I. / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Casual Interstellar Travel / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Caused the Big Bang / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Deity of Human Origin / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Driving Question / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Energy Beings / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Just Before the End / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Master Computer / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Merger of Souls / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Robot and A.I. Works / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
Standard Sci-Fi History / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Last Title / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
The Stars Are Going Out / int_1826de00
 The Last Question
hasFeature
20 Minutes into the Future / int_1826de00