The Library of Babel (website)
The Library of Babel is a website created by Brooklyn author and coder Jonathan Basile, based on Jorge Luis Borges' short story "The Library of Babel". The site was launched in 2015.
Contents of the website
According to Basile, he "was laying in bed one night and the idea of an online Library of Babel popped into head." Basile quickly realized that an actual digitalized Babel Library would require more digital storage space than one can imagine. To get around this limitation, he designed an algorithm to simulate the library instead.The Library's main page contains background information, forums and three ways to navigate the library. These ways are to have the website randomly pick one of the thousands of "volumes", to manually browse through the library, or to search for specific text. Due to the library's Infinite monkey theorem-gibberish-like contents,
there is an "Anglishize" feature, that points out words and clumps of words.
The library's content is divided into numbered digital hexagons, each with 4 walls, 20 shelves and 640 volumes. The names of hexagons are limited to 3360 alphanumeric characters, for a total of more than 105229 available hexes.
Algorithm
The algorithm Basile created generates a 'book' by iterating every permutation of 29 characters: the 26 English letters, space, comma, and period. Each book is marked by a coordinate, corresponding to its place on the hexagonal library so that every book can be found at the same place every time. The website can generate all possible pages of 3200 characters and allows users to choose among about 1.956 × 101,834,097 potential books.Academic response
The Library of Babel website attracted the attention of scholars, particularly those working at the juncture of humanities and digital media.Zac Zimmer wrote in Do Borges's librarians have bodies: "Basile's is perhaps the most absolutely dehumanizing of all Library visualizations, in that beyond being driven to suicidal madness or philosophical resignation, his Librarians have become as devoid of meaning as the gibberish-filled books themselves." Journalist Jerry Adler said "It just may be the most fascinatingly useless invention in history."