John Clark's Latin Verse Machine: 19th Century Computational Creativity
Mike Sharples

TL;DR
John Clark's 19th-century Latin verse machine, Eureka, was an early example of computational creativity, capable of generating millions of Latin hexameter lines, and he can be regarded as a pioneer in cognitive science and language generation.
Contribution
The paper highlights Clark's Eureka machine as an early instance of computational creativity and interprets his theory of kaleidoscopic evolution within modern cognitive science.
Findings
Eureka could generate over 26 million Latin verse lines.
Clark's work predates and influences modern computational creativity.
He is recognized as an early cognitive scientist.
Abstract
John Clark was inventor of the Eureka machine to generate hexameter Latin verse. He labored for 13 years from 1832 to implement the device that could compose at random over 26 million different lines of well-formed verse. This paper proposes that Clark should be regarded as an early cognitive scientist. Clark described his machine as an illustration of a theory of "kaleidoscopic evolution" whereby the Latin verse is "conceived in the mind of the machine" then mechanically produced and displayed. We describe the background to automated generation of verse, the design and mechanics of Eureka, its reception in London in 1845 and its place in the history of language generation by machine. The article interprets Clark's theory of kaleidoscopic evolution in terms of modern cognitive science. It suggests that Clark has not been given the recognition he deserves as a pioneer of computational…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Humanities and Scholarship
