What a Sixty-Five-Year-Old Book Teaches Us About A.I.

By David Owen

An illustration of Danny Dunn at a retro computer with a glitch effect scattered throughout the composition.

Neural networks have become shockingly good at generating natural-sounding text, on almost any subject. If I were a student, I’d be thrilled—let a chatbot write that five-page paper on Hamlet’s indecision!—but if I were a teacher I’d have mixed feelings. On the one hand, the quality of student essays is about to go through the roof. On the other, what’s the point of asking anyone to write anything anymore? Luckily for us, thoughtful people long ago anticipated the rise of artificial intelligence and wrestled with some of the thornier issues. I’m thinking in particular of Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkin, two farseeing writers, both now deceased, who, in 1958, published an early examination of this topic. Their book—the third in what was eventually a fifteen-part series—is “ Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine .” I first read it in third or fourth grade, very possibly as a homework assignment.

Danny Dunn, you may recall, is a “stocky and red-haired” elementary schooler. His father is dead, and he and his mother live with Professor Euclid Bullfinch, “a short, plump man with a round bald head,” who teaches at Midston University. Bullfinch “took the place of the father Danny had never known,” the book explains, and Mrs. Dunn supports herself and her son by working as his cook and housekeeper. We aren’t told how Danny’s father died—heart attack? car accident? murder?—and we know next to nothing about sleeping arrangements in the house. (“Now take your fingers out of my cake, Professor Bullfinch,” Mrs. Dunn says in the first book in the series.) But we do know that Bullfinch encourages Danny’s interest in science and lets him fool around in his private laboratory, which occupies “a long, low structure at the rear of the house.”

Danny’s best friend is Joe Pearson, “a thin, sad-looking boy”; his next-door neighbor is Irene Miller, whose father, an astronomer, also teaches at Midston. We can tell right away that Irene knows at least as much about science as Danny does—and way more than Joe, whose main academic interests are literary. As the story begins, Danny is demonstrating a recent invention of his: a piece of wood, suspended by clothesline from a pair of pulleys attached to the ceiling, into which he has inserted two pens. When he writes with either pen, the other creates a duplicate on a second sheet of paper. (This device is called a polygraph; Thomas Jefferson owned several.) “Now I can do our arithmetic homework while you’re doing our English homework,” he tells Joe. “It’ll save us about half an hour for baseball practice.” Joe runs home to get more clothesline, and Danny dreams of bigger things: “If only I could build some kind of a robot to do all our homework for us. . . .”

The boys don’t perceive a moral dilemma, but Irene does. “It—it doesn’t seem exactly honest to me,” she says. Danny disagrees, and cites his landlord: “Professor Bullfinch says that homework doesn’t have much to do with how a kid learns things at school.”

Williams and Abrashkin were all the way out at the cutting edge, technology-wise. In their first book, “ Danny Dunn and the Anti-Gravity Paint ,” Danny and Bullfinch accidentally invent a liquid that causes anything coated with it to rise off the ground. That book was published in 1956, a year before the Soviets launched the first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1 , but in Chapter 3 we learn that a similar satellite is already orbiting Earth, and is viewable through a telescope in Bullfinch’s lab. Long story short: the American government uses the paint on a spaceship, which accidentally lifts off while Danny, Joe, Bullfinch, and another scientist are inside it, having a look around. During their voyage, Danny completes an assignment that his teacher, Miss Arnold, has given him as punishment for daydreaming about rockets when he was supposed to be paying attention to her: writing “Space flight is a hundred years away” five hundred times.

Some of the scientific innovations portrayed in the Danny Dunn books are so advanced that they are still in the future—time travel, invisibility, smallification—but others have come into existence more or less as Williams and Abrashkin described them. In “ Danny Dunn and the Automatic House ,” published in 1965, Danny persuades the university to build what would nowadays be called a smart home ; it’s equipped with “the newest developments in electronic control systems,” including a voice-activated door lock, a Roomba-like self-propelled vacuum cleaner, and a bathtub that fills itself with water, adds soap, and announces, “Your bath is ready.” Danny’s mother is skeptical: “Once you start trying to save work by putting in machines, you may find you’re spending all your time taking care of the machines and not getting any fun out of your work. This kitchen is my studio—my laboratory, just like your laboratory, Professor. Would you want an automatic laboratory?”

Bullfinch says that he most certainly would not—but in “Homework Machine” we learn that he has built a computer with similar capabilities. It’s a scaled-down version of two mainframes that Williams and Abrashkin saw, during a visit to I.B.M., while they were researching their book. Bullfinch calls it Miniac:

A high panel at the back of the desk was filled with tiny light bulbs. There were a number of flat, square buttons, each with a colored panel above it. And beyond the desk was an oblong, gray metal cabinet, about the size of a large sideboard, with heavy electric cables leading to it.

An important difference between Miniac and the real computers of the nineteen-fifties—and another area in which Williams and Abrashkin were ahead of their time—is that its input medium is spoken English, not punched cards or paper tape. Danny asks Irene to demonstrate. She approaches the microphone and, following Bullfinch’s advice to “speak slowly and clearly so that Miniac can understand you and translate your words into electrical impulses,” says, “Um . . . John buys 20 yards of silk for thirty dollars. How much would 918 yards of silk cost him?” The professor presses a button, lights flash, and the typewriter responds: “$1,377.00.” After a pause, it adds, “And worth it.”

Any qualms that Irene has about getting help with her homework disappear when she discovers how much of it Miss Arnold assigns. One day, Irene asks Danny (at first, by shortwave radio) for help with a grammar exercise, and they meet in Bullfinch’s lab. Minny—as they now refer to the computer—defines “predicate noun” for her, and provides an example: “You are a fool .” Danny is suddenly inspired: “Why can’t we use Minny as a homework machine ?”

Bullfinch, conveniently, has asked Danny to keep an eye on Minny while he attends some important meetings in Washington, D.C. During the next few days, Danny, Irene, and Joe read large stacks of books into the microphone. As Danny explains, mainly to Joe, “Programming is telling the machine exactly what questions you want answered and how you want them answered. In order to do that right, you have to know just what sequences of operation you want the machine to go through.” When they’ve finished, Minny does their math problems for them, then starts on social studies.

“Man!” Joe says. “This is the way to do your homework. This is heaven!”

I hesitate to give away too much of the plot, but (spoiler alert!) two mean boys in their class, one of whom is jealous of Irene’s interest in Danny, watch them through a window and tattle to Miss Arnold. She comes to Danny’s house to confer with him and his mother—and you know that Danny is in trouble, because his mother suddenly starts calling him Dan. But he defends what he and his friends have been up to. Grocers and bankers now use adding machines instead of doing arithmetic the old-fashioned way, he says; why should students be different? Surprisingly, this argument works. Miss Arnold tells Danny that she wishes he wouldn’t let Minny do his homework, but that she won’t stop him.

Then the story becomes complicated. Irene tricks the jealous boy, Eddie (Snitcher) Philips, into revealing that he spied on them, then pushes him into a puddle. Eddie and his friend get revenge by sabotaging Minny. Bullfinch returns from Washington and is embarrassed when he tries to demonstrate Minny to two other scientists, one of whom is from the “Federal Research Council.” Danny saves the day by deducing that Eddie must have disconnected Minny’s temperature sensor; he reconnects it, and is treated as a hero. (This turn of events will be familiar to readers of the “Curious George” books, in which George is often praised for solving problems that he himself created.)

Bullfinch and one of the visiting scientists later program the repaired computer to write music, by giving it “full instructions for the composition of a sonata, plus information on note relationships,” and by modifying the typewriter so that it can print musical scores. Still, Bullfinch insists, Minny is limited in ways that humans are not. “It can never be the creator of music or of stories, or paintings, or ideas,” he says. “The machine can only help, as a textbook helps. It can only be a tool, as a typewriter is a tool.” He points out that Danny, in order to program Minny to do his homework, had to do the equivalent of even more homework, much of it quite advanced. (“Gosh, it—it somehow doesn’t seem fair,” Danny says.)

At least until recently, almost everyone has thought of computers in roughly that way. When Bullfinch and his friend play a sonata that Minny has written for them, Mrs. Dunn observes that “it isn’t exactly Beethoven”—and Bullfinch agrees. Yet Minny’s abilities clearly surpass those of a mere “tool.” The children “program” it by loading it with tagged examples, from which Minny somehow produces individualized schoolwork—a method that seems less like mid-twentieth-century programming than like the way that A.I. researchers create algorithms today. (Minny also editorializes , as with its comment about the price of silk and its example of a predicate noun.) Williams and Abrashkin foresaw a less serious practical use for artificial intelligence, too. “You know, we ought to enter her in one of those TV quiz shows,” Joe says in an early chapter, anticipating the “Jeopardy!” triumph, fifty-three years later, of I.B.M.’s Watson.

“Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine” is ostensibly about computers, but it also makes an argument about homework. In a note at the beginning of the book, Williams and Abrashkin write, “In all fairness to both Professor Bullfinch and Danny, we wish to point out that their position on homework is supported by Bulletin 1248-3 of the Educational Service Bureau, University of Pennsylvania.” I haven’t managed to turn up a copy of that bulletin, which was called “What About Homework?,” but I’ve found a number of other publications, from multiple decades, that arrive at what I assume are similar conclusions. For example, in 2007 the education critic Alfie Kohn—whose many books include “ The Homework Myth ,” published in 2018—wrote that “there is absolutely no evidence of any academic benefit from assigning homework in elementary or middle school,” and that in high school “the correlation is weak and tends to disappear when more sophisticated statistical measures are applied.” One problem with homework is that it inevitably encourages the counterproductive over-involvement of parents. (When my kids were young, I suggested to one of their teachers that he conduct a science fair for fathers only.) There’s also the issue of homework whose sole purpose is to squeeze in material that should have been covered during the school day but wasn’t. Miss Arnold offers precisely that justification for some of her huge assignments: the size of her class has nearly doubled, because of rapid population growth in Midston, and she is no longer able to give individual students as much attention as she once did.

Miss Arnold also assigns homework for a suspect reason that’s described in a paper published under the sponsorship of the U.S. Department of Education, in 1988: “Punishing assignments exercise the teacher’s power to use up time at home that would otherwise be under the student’s control. The assignments often center on behavior rather than academic skills, and stress embarrassment rather than mastery.” That’s what she was up to with all those sentences she made Danny write, back in the first book in the series. Luckily for everyone, Danny handled his embarrassment with aplomb, by writing most of the sentences during downtime in outer space, and the mindlessness of the exercise did no permanent harm to his imagination. At the end of “Homework Machine”—as he, Irene, and Joe are heading to the drugstore to celebrate Minny’s resurrection—he suddenly has “a strange, wild look in his eyes, and a faraway smile on his lips.” He says, “This is just a simple idea I had. Listen—what about a teaching machine. . . .”

Irene, as always, knows better. “Grab his other arm, Joe,” she shouts. “He needs a soda—fast.” ♦

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danny dunn and his homework machine

Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

Raymond Abrashkin , Jay Williams

Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

Author : Raymond Abrashkin , Jay Williams

Illustrator: Ezra Jack Keats

Publication: 1958 by Whittlesey House: A Division of McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.

Genre: Fiction , Humor

Series: Danny Dunn

Current state: Basic information has been added for this book. It has been read but content considerations may not be complete.

danny dunn and his homework machine

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Another very funny story about that engaging young fellow, Danny Dunn, and the adventures he attracts without even trying. It starts the day Professor Bullfinch leaves for Washington and entrusts Danny with the care of his semi-portable computer. Impetuous Danny gets the bright idea of using the computer to do his homework. To salve his conscience and those of his two companions—Irene Miller, the new girl next door, and his old friend Joe—he reasons that the long way of working things out with paper and pencil is old-fashioned. As might be expected, Mrs. Dunn and the teacher, Miss Arnold, do not go along with this theory. And when these two put their heads together, Danny's troubles really begin. Ezra Jack Keats' illustrations project the same spirit of fun in this third hilarious story of a boy who often rues his actions because he jumps too quickly to conclusions. From the dust jacket

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Raymond Abrashkin

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Humor

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Danny uses a computer that Professor Bulfinch has created for NASA to prepare his homework, despite Professor Bullfinch's warning that Danny is to leave the machine alone. With his friend Joe Pearson and his new neighbor, Irene Miller, Danny has some success with the machine before it is sabotaged. Danny figures out what is wrong with the machine and corrects the problem. Danny's teacher also learns about the machine, and has her ideas for the Homework Champions...

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Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

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Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine (TX 303) Paperback – January 1, 1966

  • Print length 122 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Scholastic Book Services
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  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B000GSVQQ8
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Scholastic Book Services; Fifth Printing edition (January 1, 1966)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 122 pages
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 4 ounces
  • Best Sellers Rank: #6,037,899 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books )

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  1. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine by Jay WilliamsRaymond Abrashkin

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  3. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine 1959 Jay Williams

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  4. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine (Danny Dunn, #3) by Jay Williams

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COMMENTS

  1. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Danny Dunn and the Weather Machine. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine is the third novel in the Danny Dunn series of juvenile science fiction/adventure books written by Raymond Abrashkin and Jay Williams. The book is "about a boy who invents a machine to do his homework for him only to be tricked into doing more with his spare time".

  2. Danny Dunn and the homework machine : Williams, Jay, 1914-1978 : Free

    Danny gets his mother and his teacher upset when he uses one. Skip to main content. We will keep fighting for all libraries - stand with us! ... Danny Dunn and the homework machine by Williams, Jay, 1914-1978. Publication date 1958 Topics Computers, Homework Publisher New York, Scholastic Book Services

  3. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine, published in 1958, is the third novel in the Danny Dunn series by Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkin. Danny is an adolescent boy who lives with the scientist Professor Bullfinch, for whom Danny's mother serves as housekeeper. In each book Danny and his sidekick Joe co-opt some invention of the Professor ...

  4. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    October 5, 2015. Danny and Joe, and new friend Irene, are in charge of Professor Bullfinch's newly-invented Miniac computer, which (miraculously) is capable of producing junior-high homework-quality printouts from voice commands.At over 60 years old, this story has run out of steam.

  5. Danny Dunn and the homework machine : Williams, Jay, 1914-1978 : Free

    Search the Wayback Machine. An illustration of a magnifying glass. Mobile Apps. Wayback Machine (iOS) Wayback Machine (Android) Browser Extensions. Chrome; Firefox; Safari; ... Danny Dunn and the homework machine by Williams, Jay, 1914-1978; Abrashkin, Raymond, 1911-1960. Publication date 1958 Topics Computers, Homework Publisher New York ...

  6. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine: Jay Williams, Raymond Abrashkin

    Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine, published in 1958, is the third novel in the Danny Dunn series by Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkin. Danny is an adolescent boy who lives with the scientist Professor Bullfinch, for whom Danny's mother serves as housekeeper. In each book Danny and his sidekick Joe co-opt some invention of the Professor ...

  7. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Danny uses a computer that Professor Bulfinch has created for NASA to prepare his homework, despite Professor Bullfinch's warning that Danny is to leave the machine alone. With his friend Joe Pearson and his new neighbor, Irene Miller, Danny has some success with the machine before it is sabotaged.

  8. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Books. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine. Raymond Abrashkin, Jay Williams. Wildside Press LLC, Jan 21, 2016 - Fiction - 112 pages. Danny uses a computer that Professor Bulfinch has created for NASA to prepare his homework, despite Professor Bullfinch's warning that Danny is to leave the machine alone. With his friend Joe Pearson and his new ...

  9. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Danny and his friends find a way to get their homework done on Professor Bulfinch's computer. Their troubles begin when a tattletale discovers their secret.

  10. What a Sixty-Five-Year-Old Book Teaches Us About A.I

    "Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine" is ostensibly about computers, but it also makes an argument about homework. In a note at the beginning of the book, Williams and Abrashkin write, "In ...

  11. danny dunn and the homework machine : Free Download, Borrow, and

    danny dunn and the homework machine. Publication date 1958 Collection inlibrary; printdisabled; internetarchivebooks Contributor Internet Archive Language English. Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2023-03-11 21:41:17 Bookplateleaf 0003 Boxid IA40368304 Camera USB PTP Class Camera Collection_set printdisabled

  12. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Description. Another very funny story about that engaging young fellow, Danny Dunn, and the adventures he attracts without even trying. It starts the day Professor Bullfinch leaves for Washington and entrusts Danny with the care of his semi-portable computer. Impetuous Danny gets the bright idea of using the computer to do his homework.

  13. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine by Jay Williams & Raymond Abrashkin. Publication date 1968-01-01 Publisher Scholastic Collection inlibrary; printdisabled; internetarchivebooks Contributor Internet Archive Language English. Notes. tight binding. Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2023-06-26 11:15:51 Autocrop_version

  14. Danny Dunn and the homework machine

    Danny Dunn and the homework machine. Catalog Number 102727722. Type Document. Description Ilustrated by Ezra Jack Keats. A young adult novel. Danny decides to try to program Professor Bullfinch's new miniature automatic computet, "Miniac," to help him do his homework faster. Date 1958 Author Williams, Jay; Abrashkin, Raymond ...

  15. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Danny uses a computer that Professor Bulfinch has created for NASA to prepare his homework, despite Professor Bullfinch's warning that Danny is to leave the machine alone. With his friend Joe Pearson and his new neighbor, Irene Miller, Danny has some success with the machine before it is sabotaged.

  16. The official Danny Dunn Website!

    Sometimes amazingly prescient (see Danny Dunn, Invisible Boyfrom 1974 for early examples of virtual reality and drone technology!), sometimes charmingly ahead-of-the-curve (see Danny argue with his teacher over the right to use a computer to do his homework in 1958's Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine!) this series of books are always light ...

  17. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine: Scholastic Books, Jay Williams

    Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine, published in 1958, is the third novel in the Danny Dunn series by Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkin. Danny is an adolescent boy who lives with the scientist Professor Bullfinch, for whom Danny's mother serves as housekeeper. In each book Danny and his sidekick Joe co-opt some invention of the Professor ...

  18. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Details. Danny uses a computer that Professor Bulfinch has created for NASA to prepare his homework, despite Professor Bullfinch's warning that Danny is to leave the machine alone. With his friend Joe Pearson and his new neighbor, Irene Miller, Danny has some success with the machine before it is sabotaged. Can Danny figure out what is wrong ...

  19. Danny Dunn&the Homework Machine : Williams

    Danny Dunn&the Homework Machine by Williams. Publication date January 2000 Publisher McGraw-Hill Collection inlibrary; printdisabled; internetarchivebooks Contributor Internet Archive Language English. Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2024-02-23 21:31:45 Autocrop_version ..16_books-20220331-.2 Boxid IA41130821

  20. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine

    Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine. Julie Mandel, Jay Williams, Raymond Abrashkin. Overview. The adventures of young Danny Dunn. He and his friends use a computer to figure out tough assignments and book reports. But along comes Eddie, the snitcher, and the fur begins to fly.

  21. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine (Danny Dunn, 3)

    Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine, published in 1958, is the third novel in the Danny Dunn series by Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkin. Danny is an adolescent boy who lives with the scientist Professor Bullfinch, for whom Danny's mother serves as housekeeper.

  22. Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine (TX 303)

    Danny Dunn and the Homework Machine, published in 1958, is the third novel in the Danny Dunn series by Jay Williams and Raymond Abrashkin. Danny is an adolescent boy who lives with the scientist Professor Bullfinch, for whom Danny's mother serves as housekeeper. In each book Danny and his sidekick Joe co-opt some invention of the Professor ...