What Frankenstein’s Creature Can Really Tell Us About AI

Mary Shelley foresaw that artificial intelligence would be made monstrous, not by human hubris but by human cruelty

Aeon Magazine
Aeon Magazine

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Detail of an original French billboard poster for “Frankenstein” by artist Jacques Faria (1931). Public domain

By Eileen Hunt Botting

Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley’s 200-year-old creature is more alive than ever. In his new role as the bogeyman of artificial intelligence (AI), ‘the monster’ made by Victor Frankenstein is all over the internet. The British literary critic Frances Wilson even called him ‘the world’s most rewarding metaphor’. Though issued with some irony, this title suited the creature just fine.

From the editors of The Guardian to the engineers at Google have come stiff warnings about AI: it’s a monster in the closet. Hidden in computer consoles and in the shadows of the world wide web, from Moscow to Palo Alto, AI is growing stronger, faster, smarter and more dangerous than its clever programmers. Worse than the bioengineered and radiated creatures of Cold War B-movies, AI is the Frankenstein’s creature for our century. It will eventually emerge — like a ghost from its machine — to destroy its makers and the whole of humanity.

Thematically, not much has changed since 1818, when the 20-year-old Shelley’s first novel went to print. As with Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus

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Aeon Magazine
Aeon Magazine

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