"The answer to this is very simple. It was a joke. It had to be a number, an ordinary, smallish number, and I chose that one. Binary representations, base thirteen, Tibetan monks are all complete nonsense. I sat at my desk, stared into the garden and thought '42 will do'. I typed it out. End of story."
~ Douglas Adams
42 was chosen as the answer, as Douglas Adams wanted to find the most unremarkable or boring number to produce the biggest anti-climax possible. Sorry for destroying anyones hopes. The only meaning that could be made is the mundane.
42 isn't unremarkable or boring! It's the only known value that is the number of sets of four distinct positive integers a, b, c, d, each less than the value itself, such that ab − cd, ac − bd, and ad − bc are each multiples of the value!
I love Douglas and have to believe that he was inspired by Robert Sheckly. If I recall, Terry Pratchett was inspired by both, even incorporating 'The Luggage' as an homage to Sheckly. All great authors, great wit and have brought me many happy hours of reading and laughing out loud - especially in public places.
I was always kind of hoping that something awesome would happen when I turned 42. Sadly, it did not.
ASCII is an incedibly simple and elegant solution to the translation of machine mathematics into human language. Douglas Adams provides a similar path in his four part trilogy. My family still finds its way through traffic by finding a car that looks like it knows where it is going and following it
I am a big fan of the Adams series, though it has been awhile since I visited.
Stanley Kubrik's "The Shining" also references the number 42 very slyly numerous times.
The documentary "Room 237" explores that, and other "hidden in plain sight" things in that movie.
"asterisks" heh
Another interesting fact is that "it's the answer to life, the universe and everything" is 42 letters.
And by the way you made my night with this post