Get the latest tech news

161 Years Ago, a New Zealand Sheep Farmer Predicted AI Doom


An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica, written by Benj Edwards: While worrying about AI takeover might seem like a modern idea that sprung from War Games or The Terminator, it turns out that a similar concern about machine dominance dates back to the time of the American Civil War, a...

The letter drew direct parallels between Charles Darwin's theory of evolution and the rapid development of machinery, suggesting that machines could evolve consciousness and eventually supplant humans as Earth's dominant species. The text anticipated several modern AI safety concerns, including the possibility of machine consciousness, self-replication, and humans losing control of their technological creations. These themes later appeared in works like Isaac Asimov's The Evitable Conflict, Frank Herbert's Dune novels (Butler possibly served as the inspiration for the term "Butlerian Jihad"), and the Matrix films.

Get the Android app

Or read this on Slashdot

Read more on:

Photo of years

years

Photo of New Zealand

New Zealand

Photo of AI doom

AI doom

Related news:

News photo

Carnarvon's NASA satellite dish receives first signal in almost 40 years

News photo

Freshly filed Sega trademarks hint at the return of another classic series, 25 years after its last entry

News photo

After Years of USB Word Salad, New Labels Strip Everything But the Speed