(Depending on how we mark the history, I think I'd currently point to the lineage of extinction concerns as beginning with Karel Čapek in 1920. Čapek coined the word 'robot', meaning 'worker', in a play R.U.R. about how these unpaid robots had rebelled and wiped out humanity. Čapek's politics were not particularly right-wing, if that part matters much to you; he was a staunch anti-fascist in the 1920s sense of that term. One can obviously point to even earlier precedents like Frankenstein, or the Golem of Prague. To mark a "starting point" of any real intellectual history is usually rather arbitrary. But neither Frankenstein nor the Golem constitute a mass-manufactured race of unpaid servants, who then turn on humanity as a whole and exterminate it; so I'm picking Rossum's Universal Robots. Čapek's story was mostly an ungrounded what-if; it was simply taken for granted that the Robots (workers) were sufficiently human-derived or human-imitative to resent working for free. I think R.U.R. nonetheless can be declared the start of the intellectual lineage even if it doesn't make a careful argument; because R.U.R. makes the fair and obvious point that if you are manufacturing a powerful new servant species, it could perhaps turn on you and destroy you. This is a reasonable thing to worry about even before you start looking into further details of careful arguments! Čapek did not need to be a secret tool of (nonexistent) robot manufacturers looking to pump their stock prices, to observe that building a powerful new sapient race, supposedly to serve humans, might have some unpleasant consequences. It's in fact an obvious sort of concern; which is why historically speaking the word "robot" was coined back when "computer" still meant a human who worked a mechanical calculator. The very first story about "robots", manufactured workers, observed that such a race of manufactured beings might possibly turn on humans and wipe them out. Some later key figures in working out more detailed reasons for concern, beyond R.U.R.'s what-if, would on my accounting include the editor John Campbell, the writer Isaac Asimov, and the academic mathematicians I. J. Good and Vernor Vinge. All of them lived far too early to be secret clever tools of AI companies. The first two wrote before ENIAC. And of course I started on this a couple of decades before the current AI companies as well.)
→ View original post on X — @esyudkowsky, 2026-04-01 02:33 UTC
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