Fault in the chess game in 2001: A Space Odyssey

Fault in the chess game in 2001: A Space Odyssey - Black Chess Pieces on Yellow Background

In the beginning of “Jupiter Mission” in 2001: A Space Odyssey, Frank and HAL play chess:

Frank: Anyway, Queen takes Pawn. Uhh. . . okay.
Hal: Bishop takes Knight's Pawn.
Frank: What a lovely move. Uhh... Rook to King one.
Hal: I'm sorry, Frank. I think you missed it. Queen to Bishop three, Bishop takes Queen, Knight takes Bishop mate.
Frank: Uhh... yeh. It looks like you're right. I resign.
Hal: Thank you for a very enjoyable game.
Frank: Yeah, thank you.

But the moves HAL suggests will mate Frank are actually wrong. HAL should have said “Queen to Bishop six”.

Was this a subtle clue by Kubrick that HAL is testing the astronauts?



Best Answer

This was taken from a real chess game Roesch vs Willi Schlage from 1910. You can see the whole game here

In 1968, Stanley Kubrick (a strong chess player himself) directed 2001: A Space Odyssey. It is probably the most famous man vs. computer chess games in film. The movie features an astronaut, Dr. Frank Poole (played by Gary Lockwood), playing a chess game with the white pieces against the HAL-9000 computer (voice by Douglas Rain). The game in the movie is from an actual game, Roesch vs. Schlage, Hamburg 1910. source

However, Hal is indeed cheating

Frank chooses to trust HAL's assessment of his future moves and resigns the game, giving the computer the victory. Here's the thing, though: HAL didn't describe his moves properly. He should have said "queen to bishop six." He's describing a mate in two moves when in reality Frank could have prolonged the game and didn't need to concede it so early. In describing the wrong move, HAL cheats his way to a victory. source

You can read this motive in two ways: either it is yet another sign that HAL is broken (a few moments later he will report that a working correct component is damaged) or that he is indeed cheating (he expects that Frank will believe him), which makes HAL more sinister but also more human.




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Does HAL cheat at chess in 2001?

He should have said "queen to bishop six." He's describing a mate in two moves when in reality Frank could have prolonged the game and didn't need to concede it so early. In describing the wrong move, HAL cheats his way to a victory.

Did HAL actually make a mistake?

The Chess Game Playing white, Frank's "Queen takes Pawn," HAL counters with, "Bishop takes Knight's Pawn," and Frank plays "Rook to King One." HAL then makes a 'mistake' in announcing a forced mate (i.e. checkmate) when he begins by saying "Queen to Bishop three" instead of the correct "Queen to Bishop six."

Why did HAL malfunction in 2001?

Dr. Chandra discovers that HAL's crisis was caused by a programming contradiction: he was constructed for "the accurate processing of information without distortion or concealment", yet his orders, directly from Dr.

Why did HAL turn evil?

Hal wasn't behaving out of malice or being "evil", he was merely trying to cope with the conflicting instructions as well as trying to stay alive, as he equated being disconnected with death, for he had never been to sleep either, and didn't know that one can wake up from being asleep.



Astronaut Frank Poole VS Supercomputer HAL 9000




More answers regarding fault in the chess game in 2001: A Space Odyssey

Answer 2

As with any work of art, you are free to interpret what you like into the scene. Here's my take on it. In 1968 the ultimate goal of AI research was to build a computer that could beat humans at chess. So by showing HAL playing and beating Frank, and indeed having a civilised conversation about the game, Kubrick is showing us the heights that human technology has achieved. The fact that HAL says the wrong move is at worst sloppiness in the script.

However if you insist that the script is demonstrating a subtle clue as to HAL's motives, it would be a pretty high risk strategy on HAL's part to "cheat" in this way, assuming that Frank is at least as competent at chess as the many people who spotted this cheat. Imagine HAL's embarrassment when Frank points out that Q-B3 is not possible from that position!

Answer 3

The fallacy here is that HAL lied to win the game. In fact, the game was won in a forced checkmate no matter how many moves it took after Poole played 'Uh-hrumph. ... anyways, Queen takes Pawn'¹. Note here that Poole doesn't observe contemporary descriptive notation for his moves against HAL and HAL's subsequent description of the force mate was either a verbal courtesy for Poole's benefit or a vernacular that the two had fallen into.

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 Immediately prior to 'Bishop takes Knight's Pawn'

The following interview with the the Earth-based reporter Amor was conducted before the chess game.

AMOR: The sixth member of the Discovery crew was not concerned about the problems of hibernation for he was the latest result in machine intelligence: the H.A.L. nine-thousand computer which can reproduce - though some experts still prefer to use the word "mimic" - most of the activities of the human brain and with incalculably greater speed and reliability. We next spoke with the H.A.L nine-thousand computer whom we learned one addresses as Hal. Good afternoon, Hal. How's everything going?

HAL: Good afternoon, Mr. Amor. Everything is going extremely well.

AMOR: Hal, you have an enormous responsibility on this mission. In many ways perhaps the greatest responsibility of any single mission element. You are the brain and central nervous system of the ship and your responsibilities include watching over the men in hibernation. Does this ever cause you any lack of confidence?

HAL: Let me put it this way, Mr. Amor. The nine-thousand series is the most reliable computer ever made. No nine-thousand computer has ever made a mistake or distorted information. We are all, by any practical definition of the words, foolproof and incapable of error.

Forced mate was the ultimate decision for the game after Poole's Queen takes Pawn'. It doesn't matter whether it wa 2, 4, 6 or a hundred moves ahead of current play. If I was in a forced mate position with stalling moves, I would abandon my stalling efforts and accept the inevitable.

HAL's only 'mistake' was to call his/her moves from Poole's position. That is to say that the black chess board chess move positions were called relative to the the White chess pieces ; they should have been called from black's position. Of course, that could be also be called a courtesy.


¹ The game was in fact a classical chess match familiar to chess aficionados.

Answer 4

Stanley Kubrick used a game from history, Roesch v. Schlage 1910, discussed at "2001: A Chess Space Odyssey" https://www.chess.com/article/view/2001-a-chess-space-odyssey. But I don't understand your question or the explanation there.

Hal's "Queen to Bishop Three" means 15... Qf3 in today's notation. Why should it have been "Queen to Bishop six" (15... Qf6)? HAL has a queen, a bishop, and two knights movin' in on the white king, three of white's pieces are still jammed up in their original position and here Poole (ie. Roesch) has now put his heavy weapon in behind obstacles. Qf3 is what the 1910 game has and it leads to mate. Does Qf6 do something to kill white deader than he already is?

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