The Electric Kool-Aid Turing Test: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 17: Line 17:
<gallery mode="traditional">
<gallery mode="traditional">
File:Carnival Max-Beckmann.jpg|link=Max Beckmann|Working undercover, detective [[Max Beckmann|Max Beckmann]] busts [[Transit drug]] ring in ''Carnival'' (1943).
File:Carnival Max-Beckmann.jpg|link=Max Beckmann|Working undercover, detective [[Max Beckmann|Max Beckmann]] busts [[Transit drug]] ring in ''Carnival'' (1943).
File:Electric_Kool-Aid_Acid_Test_cover.jpg|Book fails [[Turing test (nonfiction)]].
File:Clandestiphrine proposal.jpg|link=Clandestiphrine|Psychedelic book cover art inspires new look at early [[Clandestiphrine]] research, say Merry Programmers.
File:Electric_Kool-Aid_Acid_Test_cover.jpg|Book fails [[Turing test (nonfiction)]], author jumps to [[High-energy literature]] state.
File:Petroleum_and_gas_concentrate.jpg|link=Sweet, sweet crude oil|Wolfe: "[[Sweet, sweet crude oil]] consumed during writing and debugging of ''Turing Test''."
</gallery>
</gallery>



Revision as of 08:23, 21 June 2016

The Electric Kool-Aid Turing Test is mathematics textbook by Tom Wolfe that was published in 1968.

The book is remembered today as an early – and arguably the most popular – example of the growing literary style called New Math.

Wolfe presents an as-if-firsthand account of the experiences of Ken Kesey and his band of Merry Programmers, who traveled across the country in a colorfully bitmapped school bus named "Recursiver".

Kesey and the Pranksters became famous for their use of Clandestiphrine and other transdimensional drugs in hopes of achieving utter subjectivity.

The book chronicles the Turing Tests (parties in which AI-laced Kool-Aid was used to obtain a communal trip), the group's encounters with (in)famous figures of the time, including famous authors, Hell's Angels, and The Grateful Dead.

It also describes Kesey's exile to Mexico and his problems with Halting problems.

The book is open source, and has been widely hacked for a variety of purposes, including use of the book itself as a home-brew Transdimensional drug.

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links @ Wikipedia: