
THE ARMY-ANT
IN TECHNOLOGY
Then,
when they reached the Valley of the Ants, an ant said: "Ants! Enter
your dwellings, so that Sulayman and his troops do not crush you
unwittingly." (Qur'an, 27:18)
The "Valley of the Ants" refers to a special place and special
ants. In addition, the fact that Prophet Sulayman (as) could hear
the ants talking among themselves may contain striking references
to future developments in computer technology. The present-day term
"Silicon Valley" refers to the centre of the world of technology.
It is most significant that a "valley of the ants" appears in the
account of Prophet Sulayman's (as) life. Allah may be drawing our
attention to the advanced technology of the future.
Furthermore, ants and other insect species are widely used in advanced
technology as models in robot projects and are intended to serve
in a wide range of areas, from the defence industry to technology.
The verse may also be referring to these developments.
Latest Developments in Miniature Technology:
Army-Ant Robots
The best known project using ants as a model are the "Army-Ant
Robot" projects being carried out independently in several countries.
One study being carried out by the Virginia Polytechnic Institute
and Virginia State University seeks to develop small, inexpensive,
and simple physically identical robots that can be used as a robot
army. Project officials explain these robots' functionality in the
following terms: "The way they behave as a group, in a coordinated
manner, perform a series of physical actions, and take joint decisions."
These robot armies' mechanical and electrical designs have been
based on the behaviour of an ant community. They are called the
"army-ant" robots because of their similarities to their insect
counterparts.
The
"army-ant" robot system was originally designed as a "material-carrying
system." According to this scenario, several small robots would
be charged with jointly lifting and carrying objects. It was later
decided that they could be used for other tasks. One report describes
other tasks to which they might be assigned in the future:
Nuclear and hazardous waste cleanup with robotic
"swarms," mining (including material removal and search-and-rescue),
mine sweeping (both land and water), surveillance and sentry,
planetary surface exploration and excavation.197
In a report by Israel A. Wagner, an expert on ant robot technology,
the ant robot projects were described in these terms:
Ant-robots are simple physical or virtual creatures designed
to cooperate in order to achieve a common goal. They are assumed
to have very limited resources of energy, sensing and computing,
and to communicate via traces left in the workspace or on the
ground, like many insects naturally do
The distribution of work among multiple a(ge)nts
can be made by either a central controller who sends orders to
the agents, or by an a-priori agreement on a certain partitioning
that, if obeyed by the agents, eventually leads to a completion
of the given mission. A third way, used throughout the current
work, is to design the behavior of individuals such that cooperation
will naturally emerge in the course of their work, without making
a-priori decisions on the structure of the cooperation. The specific
application that we address is covering, which is also known as
exploring or searching. This variety of names hints to the many
applications this problem might have: from cleaning the floor
of a house to mapping an unknown planet or demining a mine field.198
As can be seen in these examples, an ant's social lifestyle forms
the basis of many projects, and the various ant-based robot technologies
are providing benefits for human beings. That is why it is so important
that ants and their valley are referred to in the Qur'anic account
of Prophet Sulayman's (as) life. The term "ants" in the verse may
refer to an army consisting of robots, future developments in robot
technology, and how robots will play an important role in human
life. For example, they may perform many arduous tasks and thus
make people's lives more comfortable. (Allah knows best.)

197. John S. Bay,
“Design of the ‘Army Ant’ Cooperative Lifting
Robot,” http://armyant.ee.vt.edu/paper/robo_mag.html.
198. Israel A. Wagner, “My Travels With my A(u)nts: Distributed
Ant Robotics,” www.cs.technion.ac.il/~wagner/pub/thesis_abs_eng.html.
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