Judson and Millington debate machine intelligence
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Commander Millington inquires about cracking the new North Atlantic U-boats cipher, and Doctor Judson expresses uncertainty about the time it will take.
Doctor Judson explains the challenges of cracking the cipher and hints at the potential of the computing machine.
Commander Millington questions the implications of creating thinking machines.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Disturbed by the implications of Judson's vision despite maintaining professional composure
Millington enters with military bearing, listening intently to Judson's report before posing a probing question about the ultimate beneficiaries of machine intelligence. His posture and tone reveal skepticism toward unchecked technological reliance, even as he frames the challenge in terms of understanding the 'Nazi mind' rather than outright rejection of the machine.
- • Assess whether the machine can realistically tackle the upgraded six-rotor cipher in time
- • Surface the philosophical and moral risks of replacing human judgment with machine decisions
- • Understanding the human dimension of the enemy is essential to defeating them
- • Technology without moral boundaries becomes a dangerous tool
Surging intellectual triumph masking irritation at interruptions, enthusiastic about the machine's possibilities
Judson hunches over his six-rotor cipher machine with brusque confidence, rattling off technical updates about Nazi cipher changes and the Ultima's capability to crack them. His agitated energy barely contains his excitement about the machine's potential, dismissing human limitations outright as he predicts a future dominated by computing machines.
- • Convince Millington to authorize immediate use of the Ultima machine against the new six-rotor cipher
- • Assert the machine's superiority over human cognition in codebreaking tasks
- • Machines are inherently superior to human minds at logic-intensive tasks like cryptanalysis
- • The future belongs to automated thinking machines, rendering human limitations obsolete
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Ultima codebreaking machine forms the immovable centerpiece of the scene, its mechanical complexity highlighted as Judson identifies the Nazis' shift to six rotors and insists the machine can adapt. The device becomes both the subject and object of debate, embodying technological potential while its 'thinking' capability symbolizes an impending moral reckoning.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The windowless Decrypt Room functions as a pressure chamber of concentrated intellect where the machine's mechanical heartbeat counters Millington's military precision. Its sterilized metal walls and vacuum tube displays reflect the cold calculus of war-driven innovation, while the absence of natural light amplifies the unnatural intelligence emanating from the machine.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Nazi Forces serve as the operational target of the Decrypt Room's activities, represented through their updated six-rotor cipher system which necessitates immediate technological adaptation. The organization's cipher changes become the direct catalyst for Judson's demonstration of Ultima's capabilities and Millington's subsequent moral inquiry.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor raises an existential question about time and the 'finality' of war ('does the war end when the war ends?'), which mirrors Millington's questioning of military priorities ('why start a war in the week before it ends?'). Both challenge linear narratives of conflict."
Investigating a tilted gravestone at Saint Jude's Church"The Doctor raises an existential question about time and the 'finality' of war ('does the war end when the war ends?'), which mirrors Millington's questioning of military priorities ('why start a war in the week before it ends?'). Both challenge linear narratives of conflict."
Doctor chooses to join Ace at Maidens PointPart of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"MILLINGTON: Get inside the Nazi mind, Judson. Learn to think the way they think. It's the only way to understand their ciphers."
"JUDSON: The machine can do it, if you'd be so kind as to authorise it, sir. Thank you. Oh yes, the machine can do it. This is the first. In the future there'll be many more computing machines, thinking machines."
"MILLINGTON: Yes, but whose thoughts will they think?"