Explain SMBC — the wiki for Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal

programmable-matter

2016-05-25 View on smbc-comics.com → 1 revision
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programmable-matter
Votey panel for programmable-matter
This explanation is incomplete or may contain errors. It was generated by AI and has not yet been reviewed by a human editor.

Explanation

The Joke

Scientists present a breakthrough: they have created nanoscale matter capable of movement, connections to other nanoscale objects, and signaling. With just one handful of "nano clay," you can instruct it to reform into any shape: a knife, a bowl, a prosthetic hand -- anything. But there is a tradeoff: because the material is not specialized for any purpose, no particular configuration will be as good as a simple, purpose-built tool. A character responds: "So you can have everything, as long as you're okay with nothing being particularly good." The scientist replies: "Exactly!" The final panel shows a building labeled "MIT Center for Advanced Metaphors for Human Existence."

The Humor

The comic uses the concept of programmable matter as a metaphor for human life and potential. The tradeoff described -- you can be anything, but you will never be as good at any one thing as something purpose-built -- mirrors the existential dilemma of human choice. We can pursue any career, hobby, or lifestyle, but specializing in everything means excelling at nothing. The punchline reveals that the entire "scientific presentation" was actually just an elaborate metaphor for the human condition, housed in a university center dedicated to producing exactly such metaphors. The joke is both about the universality of this life tradeoff and about academia's tendency to dress up philosophical observations in scientific language.

References

  • Programmable matter / nanotechnology: A real area of research involving materials that can change their physical properties on command.
  • The paradox of choice / specialization tradeoff: The philosophical observation that having unlimited options can be paralyzing and that generalists sacrifice depth for breadth.
View History (1) Original Comic