"Computer Science is embarrassed by the computer"
About this Quote
Computer Science, Perlis suggests, has always had a chip on its shoulder: the field wants to be taken seriously as an idea-machine, not a service department for whatever plastic box happens to be on the desk this decade. The line lands because it flips the expected hierarchy. You assume the computer is the star and the science the supporting actor; Perlis implies the opposite, that the science is the adult in the room, stuck babysitting a noisy, literal-minded contraption that the public keeps mistaking for the whole story.
The intent is partly defensive, partly aspirational. In the late 20th century, “computer science” was still fighting for academic legitimacy, tugged between mathematics, electrical engineering, and a booming industry that measured value in shipped products. The “computer” in Perlis’s sentence isn’t just hardware; it’s the cultural fixation on machinery and speed, on gadgets as destiny. That fixation embarrasses the discipline because it narrows the imagination: if you think the essence is the box, you miss the abstractions that outlast it - algorithms, languages, complexity, proofs, models of thought.
The subtext has bite: the computer is both too concrete and too trendy. It seduces outsiders into confusing implementation with understanding, and it tempts insiders to chase optimization and tooling at the expense of conceptual clarity. Perlis, a pioneer of programming languages, is staking a claim that the real action is in the invisible architecture of ideas - and that the moment you let the machine define the field, you’re no longer doing science, just operating equipment.
The intent is partly defensive, partly aspirational. In the late 20th century, “computer science” was still fighting for academic legitimacy, tugged between mathematics, electrical engineering, and a booming industry that measured value in shipped products. The “computer” in Perlis’s sentence isn’t just hardware; it’s the cultural fixation on machinery and speed, on gadgets as destiny. That fixation embarrasses the discipline because it narrows the imagination: if you think the essence is the box, you miss the abstractions that outlast it - algorithms, languages, complexity, proofs, models of thought.
The subtext has bite: the computer is both too concrete and too trendy. It seduces outsiders into confusing implementation with understanding, and it tempts insiders to chase optimization and tooling at the expense of conceptual clarity. Perlis, a pioneer of programming languages, is staking a claim that the real action is in the invisible architecture of ideas - and that the moment you let the machine define the field, you’re no longer doing science, just operating equipment.
Quote Details
| Topic | Technology |
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