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The Library of Babel

Borges's 1941 story — the infinite library containing every possible book, every truth and every gibberish — the cautionary extreme that Calvino's multiplicity requires a shaping consciousness to avoid.
Jorge Luis Borges's 1941 story imagines a library of infinite hexagonal rooms, each containing shelves of identical books. Between them, the books contain every possible combination of letters and therefore every possible text. Every masterpiece. Every error. Every almost-masterpiece differing from a masterpiece by a single misplaced letter. Every catalog of the library. Every false catalog. The totality is useless. The infinite, without selection, is indistinguishable from nothing, because the ratio of signal to noise approaches zero as the collection approaches completeness. The librarians who inhabit the library spend their lives searching for the book that would explain the library — and cannot, because the book exists but so do all its counterfeits, and the means to distinguish them do not. The story is Calvino's cautionary example in the memo on multiplicity, and the structural parallel to large language model training data.
The Library of Babel
The Library of Babel

In The You On AI Field Guide

Borges wrote the story during his tenure at the Miguel Cané municipal

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