Multivac appeared in over a dozen science fiction stories by American writer
Isaac Asimov, some of which have entered the popular imagination. In the early Multivac story, "
Franchise", Multivac chooses a single "most representative" person from the population of the United States, whom the computer then interrogates to determine the country's overall orientation. All elected offices are then filled by the candidates the computer calculates as acceptable to the populace. Asimov wrote this story as the logical culmination – and/or possibly the
reductio ad absurdum – of UNIVAC's ability to forecast election results from small samples. In possibly the most famous Multivac story, "
The Last Question", two slightly drunken technicians ask Multivac if humanity can reverse the increase of
entropy. Multivac fails, displaying the error message "INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR MEANINGFUL ANSWER". The story continues through many iterations of computer technology, each more powerful and ethereal than the last. Each of these computers is asked the question, and each returns the same response until finally
the universe dies. At that point Multivac's final successor, the Cosmic AC (which exists entirely in
hyperspace) has collected all the data it can, and so poses the question to itself. As the universe died, Cosmic AC drew all of humanity into hyperspace in order to preserve them until it could finally answer the Last Question. Ultimately, Cosmic AC
did decipher the answer, announcing "Let there be light!" and essentially ascending to the state of the God of the Old Testament. Asimov claimed this to be the favorite of his stories. In "
All the Troubles of the World", the version of Multivac depicted reveals a very unexpected problem. Having had the weight of the whole of humanity's problems on its figurative shoulders for ages it has grown tired, and it sets plans in motion to cause its own death. == Significance ==