CONCEPT
Multiplicity (Calvino)
The literary value of the encyclopedic work — Gadda, Borges, Musil — that holds many worlds simultaneously and refuses to reduce them to one, paired with the demand that the multiplicity be shaped by a selecting intelligence.
The fifth memo. Calvino's admission and declaration: he is drawn to the work that attempts to contain everything. The encyclopedic novel, the narrative that refuses to choose a single thread when it could hold a hundred, the book that aspires to be a map of the world. His examples are Carlo Emilio Gadda's labyrinthine Roman narratives, Borges's forking paths, Robert Musil's thousand-page meditation on possibility. These works share a structural feature: their organizing principle is the simultaneous presence of many things, many perspectives, many systems of order that coexist without resolving into a single hierarchy. Applied to AI, multiplicity becomes the frame that illuminates both the power and the peril of
large language models — engines of unprecedented combinatorial range that produce, absent a
shaping consciousness, Borges's
Library of Babel.
In The You On AI Field Guide
A large language model is the most powerful engine of multiplicity ever built. This is not metaphor. The architecture