"On Exactitude in Science" or
"On Rigor in Science" (the original
Spanish-language title is
"Del rigor en la ciencia") is a one-paragraph
short story by
Jorge Luis Borges, about the
map/territory relation, written in the form of a literary
forgery.
Plot
The story elaborates on a conceit in Lewis Carroll's Sylvie and Bruno Concluded: a fictional map that had "the scale of a mile to the mile." One of Carroll's characters notes some practical difficulties with this map and states that "we now use the country itself, as its own map, and I assure you it does nearly as well."
The Borges story, credited falsely as a quotation from "Suarez Miranda, Viajes de varones prudentes, Libro IV, Cap. XLV, Lerida, 1658", imagines an empire where the science of cartography becomes so exact that only a map on the same scale as the empire itself will suffice. "[S]ucceeding Generations… came to judge a map of such Magnitude cumbersome... In the western Deserts, tattered Fragments of the Map are still to be found, Sheltering an occasional Beast or beggar...
Publication history
The story was first published in the March 1946 edition of
Los Anales de Buenos Aires,
año 1, no. 3 as part of a piece called "Museo" under the name B. Lynch Davis, a joint
pseudonym of Borges and
Adolfo Bioy Casares; that piece credited it as the work of "Suarez Miranda". It was collected later that year in the 1946 second Argentinian edition of Borges's
Historia Universal de la Infamia (
A Universal History of Infamy). The names "B. Lynch Davis" and "Suarez Miranda" would be combined later that year to form another pseudonym, B. Suarez Lynch, under which Borges and Bioy Casares published
Un modelo para la muerte, a collection of detective fiction.
Notes
External links
The story is readily available in its entirety online: