Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas - 40 | Adrienne Mayor on Gods and Robots in Ancient Mythology

Episode Date: April 1, 2019

The modern world is full of technology, and also with anxiety about technology. We worry about robot uprisings and artificial intelligence taking over, and we contemplate what it would mean for a comp...uter to be conscious or truly human. It should probably come as no surprise that these ideas aren't new to modern society — they go way back, at least to the stories and mythologies of ancient Greece. Today's guest, Adrienne Mayor, is a folklorist and historian of science, whose recent work has been on robots and artificial humans in ancient mythology. From the bronze warrior Talos to the evil fembot Pandora, mythology is rife with stories of artificial beings. It's both fun and useful to think about our contemporary concerns in light of these ancient tales. Support Mindscape on Patreon or Paypal. Adrienne Mayor is a Research Scholar Classics and History and Philosophy of Science at Stanford University. She is also a Berggruen Fellow at Stanford's Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. Her work has encompasses fossil traditions in classical antiquity and Native America, the origins of biological weapons, and the historical precursors of the stories of Amazon warriors. In 2009 she was a finalist for the National Book Award. Web page at Stanford Amazon author page Wikipedia Google Scholar Video of a talk on Amazons Twitter

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Starting point is 00:00:55 These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Hello, everyone, welcome to the Minescape podcast. I'm your host, Sean Carroll. And you might remember a couple weeks ago, we did a slight detour from our usual topics. I'm not exactly sure what our usual topics are, but we took a detour back into the ancient world. We talked with Ed Watts about the decline of the Roman Republic. And of course, one of the interesting things about ancient history or history at all is its resonances with contemporary history. So today we're going to go back to the ancient world.
Starting point is 00:01:26 I had a good time in that previous podcast. I hope you did too. So today we're going to go back, but with a slightly different twist, connecting it to our issues of technology and artificial intelligence. In fact, we're going to be asking what were robots and AI systems like 2,500 years ago. Now, you might be thinking to yourself, there weren't any robots or artificial intelligences back in ancient Greece and Rome, and you're correct, but that didn't stop people from talking about them. The mythology, the stories, the poems of ancient Greece and Rome were in some sense similar to the science. science fiction and fantasy of today. They allowed the authors to let their imaginations roam free, and they would often stop at the point where they were talking about constructed beings in the shape
Starting point is 00:02:11 or manner of humans. So today's guest is Adrian Mayer, who is a historian of ancient scientist and a classical folklorist at Stanford. She's very interesting at this because she not only reads the ancient texts, but also consults the archaeological, paleontological evidence. So we're going to talk about all the different appearances in Greek mythology of robot-like creatures. And of course, being that with Greek mythology, there was always a lesson, right? There was always something went wrong because somebody did something bad. And what it reflects is the fact that the worries or the interesting conundrums that face you when you talk about human-like machines were just as relevant, 2,500 years ago when there
Starting point is 00:02:54 were no such machines as they are now. So it's at the very least fun and hopefully a little bit more than fun to think about what was prefigured in ancient mythology about our current worries about artificial intelligence, robots, and how they're changing society. So I think this is a fun episode. We'll also touch a little bit at the end on a different book that Adrian wrote previously about Amazon's. Amazon's, of course, are mythological female warriors. There was no society that was all female warriors, but she makes the case quite convincingly that there were female. worriers historically on whom the Amazon legends were based. So it's yet another example of how things going on in the ancient world still have their reflections today. So I think this is a good
Starting point is 00:03:38 mind-expanding episode, even if it's a little bit off of our usual beaten path. So let's go. Hi, my name is Lisa, and I'm a licensed psychotherapist, which means my work doesn't magically end when the session does. There are notes to write, appointments to manage, billing, insurance follow-ups, and somehow all that admin used to creep into my nights and weekends. That's why I switched to Simple Practice. Simple Practice is an all-in-one electronic health record built specifically for therapists with HIPAA compliant tools and high trust certification. So I don't have to worry about juggling systems or cutting corners just to keep things running.
Starting point is 00:04:10 Scheduling, documentation, billing, insurance, client communications, even automated appointment reminders. It all lives in one place. And if you're starting or growing a practice, Simple Practice also offers a credentialing service that helps simplify insurance enrollment, which can be a huge lift when you're you're starting to scale. Right now, Simple Practice is celebrating Mental Health Provider Day with an exclusive offer. Up to 70% off for one year. Yes, up to 70% off for one year. But hurry, offer ends May 15th at simplepractice.com. Simplepractice.com. When Toyota builds an electric vehicle, we don't start
Starting point is 00:04:47 with a blank slate. We start with everything we know. The BZ brings Toyota's proven engineering to electric with impressive range. intuitive technology and Toyota reliability, BZ reflects decades of experience, reimagined for what's next. The BZ isn't just electric. It's Toyota Electric. We make it easy. Toyota, let's go places. Adrian Mayer, welcome to the Mindscape podcast. Thank you for inviting me. So we've had plenty of people in the show, you know, there's a lot of scientists, technologists, et cetera, but we have this special time that we're going to have with you because you've written a book about ancient ideas of technology, robots, cyborgs, artificial intelligence. But for the most part, correct me if I'm wrong,
Starting point is 00:05:52 these are not actual stuff that people built. These are mythological tales. These are completely made up stories. Is that right? Well, you know, I wondered whether it was possible that the concepts, the ideas about creating artificial life, automaton, robots, even, even, um, even, um, um, artificial intelligence, I wondered if those ideas were thinkable before the technology made such enterprise as possible. And I did find that remarkably, if you look at mythology, as early as the time of Homer, and now we're talking about 750 to 650 BC, the first writings in the ancient Greek world, a group of ancient Greek myths were envisioning how to imitate and imitate nature and make automaton's by means of biotechne.
Starting point is 00:06:45 And that's a Greek word that means life through craft. That would be what we now call biotechnology. And they called them beings that were made not born. So in these myths, and I'm talking about myths popular, very famous beloved myths like Jason and the Argonauts, stories about the sorceress Medea and the bronze robot Talos who guarded the island of Crete, the legendary craftsman Daedalus and Prometheus, who was known as the Firebringer,
Starting point is 00:07:18 and then Pandora, the female, the artificial female, who was created by the god of technology and invention, have Festus. And these were very vivid myths, and I think of them as sort of ancient thought experiments, kind of set in an alternate world, where technology was marvelously advanced because it's divine. So it's the gods making these beings that are made not born, made by biotechne. But in the last chapter of my book, I do talk about the genuine self-moving devices and automatones that were actually fabricated and made by real inventors and craftsmen beginning in the 4th century BC.
Starting point is 00:08:07 So even that goes back much earlier than people have recognized. Yeah. I mean, I want to hear all these stories because all these stories are fantastic. But just to set the stage a little bit, maybe what would be the way that a person who lived in the 5th century BC thought about technology? I mean, did they think of machines as a thing? There was obviously simple machines, levers and so forth were being invented back in those days. But these days, in our lives, technological advances very much. important to us. Is that a concept that they would have had? It's interesting what their technology
Starting point is 00:08:44 and machines was used for in the practical world. It's amusing that they didn't use them in their everyday life, but they used them in warfare and in the theater. So there are machines to raise curtains and to bring things onto the stage so that it looks sort of magical. And then there are torsion catapults and other siege machines that use technology. But for everyday life, not so much, unless you consider things like the bow and arrow and things like that as human enhancement machines, in a way they sort of are. But I think most people, when they thought of technology, they thought of people doing metal work and things like that. And the god, Hephaestus, of course was a blacksmith god.
Starting point is 00:09:34 He's the only god with a job, if you think about it. I mean, he's always described as he's sweating over his work, and he's surrounded by his tools. And what's interesting is that when he's described in the literature, in the myths or in the literature, or depicted in ancient vase paintings, Hephaestus has always shown working, surrounded by his tools, and he was thought of by ordinary people as using
Starting point is 00:10:01 the same tools, the same materials, the same methods that an ordinary craftsman would be using in his workshop on earth, but of course he's a god so that his productions are going to just be marvelous and awesome. Yeah, I mean, that's a very interesting point that they would have been used to the products of craftsmanship, right? Yes. But the actual, something that is like a machine in a more modern sense would have been limited to when they went to the theater or when they went to war or something like that. So they knew about them, but they weren't household devices, I guess we should say.
Starting point is 00:10:39 That's generally true. On the other hand, they probably saw some moving statues of gods in temples, because we do have some descriptions of animated statues at a very early date. and that would be feasible. Either with or without, if it's a machine, it means that there's no one there actually moving the parts,
Starting point is 00:11:07 but you could use steam or levers, springs, weights, things like that to cause a statue to blink its eyes, for instance, or move its arm, hold out its hands or cry or sweat or bleed, things like that, they could make statues that were animated in that way. And if you think about it, there's almost an uncanny valley effect that goes all the way back to these times of Homer. Yeah, that would have been very spooky to see a suddenly moving statue, especially back in the days when the idea of machines was not commonplace. Right. The uncanny valley effect was first identified, I think, in 1970 by Masahiro Mori, the Japanese roboticist. And it describes that eerie
Starting point is 00:11:56 sensation that we have when we encounter really hyper-realistic robots. Yeah. But I've found many examples in Homer's Odyssey and Iliad of people who have that same eerie, disquieting, but sort of religious awe about hyper-realism of the statues and paintings in antiquity. And of course, now we know that all of the... these statues, not just the marble ones, but even the bronze ones, were painted realistically. And they weren't painted with these garish colors that you see as the reconstructions now,
Starting point is 00:12:37 that they know what kind of paints they were and colors. They mixed wax with the pigments so that it had a warm look so that it looked real. Oh, I see. I was under the impression from these reconstructions that I've seen that they were fairly cartoonish in some way, but you're saying they were a lot more realistic than that. They were much more realistic. The recreations are just taking the most strict hue of the pigment that they have found. But we know that they were very realistic looking.
Starting point is 00:13:11 And they even had inlaid eyelashes and eyes and pupils and inlaid fingernails. I mean, these were realistic statues. If you think about seeing these in a temple, they're life size. They're painted realistically. they're in a realistic pose. And if you go there at night, there's no light except from an oil lamp or perhaps the moon. So you would have that uncanny valley effect. So, yeah, so the audience would have, audience for these stories would be familiar with the ideas of artificial creatures, artificial human beings.
Starting point is 00:13:48 It's very telling, of course, that as soon as we imagine making artificial machines, we immediately imagine making artificial people. That's, of course, what we're going to do. That's right. And so they start telling stories about them. You know, I would, my idea was just to start with the story of Talos because he's clearly, you know, one of the stars of your book. And it made me go back and watch some YouTube clips from the famous Jason and the Argonauts movie from the 1960s. Ah, I love that movie. And in fact, the first image in my book is an image of the great bronze robot from that movie.
Starting point is 00:14:23 because someone made a bronze cast of the original model, and it shows him crumbling. And Jason and the Argonauts is really a cult film now. It was 1963, I think. But it's based on ancient epic poem called the Argonautica about Jason and the Argonauts. Some scholars think might be as old or even older than Homer. So we have a story of a great bronze robot created by Hephaestus, the god of technology.
Starting point is 00:14:59 Talos was a huge, you could say, giant android made of bronze. He was charged with defending Crete against invaders, and he patrolled King Minos' kingdom of Crete by marching around the island three times a day. Someone has calculated that he would have to travel about 100, 15 miles an hour to accomplish this feat. Yeah, we're talking about ancient science fictions here, right? And so, yeah. And Talos was kind of programmed by Hephaestus
Starting point is 00:15:33 to repel invaders. He had several capabilities. He could pick up large rocks and throw them at intruders. He hurled boulders to sink any foreign ships that he saw approaching Crete Shores. And in close combat, he could heat, his bronze body to red hot and then grab up a victim and hug them to his chest
Starting point is 00:15:56 to roast them alive. So he does act like a robot. He fits the definition of a robot in that he can carry out these activities but even more remarkably we know about his inner workings. And this is the first description of a robot
Starting point is 00:16:12 in Greek literature and we know the details of his inner workings. Apparently he was built with an internal artery or vein, some sort of conduit that went from his head to his feet. And we even know his power source. His power source was I-Corps.
Starting point is 00:16:34 And I-Corps, of course, is a mysterious life fluid of the gods. That's what makes them immortal. So we've got I-Corpsing through this single vein from his neck to his ankle. and this bronze androids you could call it a biomimetic vivis system because it is actually
Starting point is 00:16:54 described as an artery using a medical term, the biological term, for a vein or artery. And yet he's made of bronze and the whole system is sealed by a bronze bolt on his ankle. So this is a technological product. This June, the world comes to Los Angeles.
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Starting point is 00:17:51 The BZ brings Toyota's proven engineering to electric. With impressive range, intuitive technology, and Toyota reliability, BZ reflects decades of experience, reimagined for what's next. The BZ isn't just electric. It's Toyota Electric. We make it easy. Toyota, let's go places. Yeah, no, absolutely. But just to put ourselves in the mood here, I guess people at that time didn't realize that even for living organisms, blood circulated. It went around and around. It came and went rather than just going in one direction. They hadn't quite figured that if I'm putting my history of biology correctly. Is that right?
Starting point is 00:18:35 That's right. But what's really interesting is that I think I've cited a study in my book that, that shows that people still have that kind of vision about electricity or the body, but especially like electricity. We know that it takes two wires to transmit and conduct electricity, and yet people still think of it as a single pulsating fluid or substance. So it's interesting that we still sort of have that sort of primitive view. So who's the author of the organautica? The Argonautica was a set of oral legends and myths and tales or stories before it was ever written down.
Starting point is 00:19:29 The first time it was written down in its entirety in a surviving form was by Apollonius of Rhodes, a poet from the third century. but he was writing down what were very old oral traditions. But it does seem like whoever invented this story puts a little bit of brainwork into figuring out how Talos would work. It's kind of impressive that it wasn't just magic, right? It really was a machine. Yes, and that's one of the distinctions that I want to make clear when we talk about these automaton and robots, is that they are imagined as products of technology.
Starting point is 00:20:08 if you think of metal working and the way he's made of bronze and has inner workings. He's not brought to life by magic. Every culture has these stories, including Greece, but every ancient culture, has stories of inert matter that's magically brought to life by some sort of spell or maybe a God's command. You think of Adam and Eve or even Pygmalion and his ivory step. statue. She was not made as an automaton or a technological being. She was magically brought to life by the goddess of love. So what I'm interested in is how these mythological stories actually imagine technological products, synthetic and asteroids and artificial men and women and animals.
Starting point is 00:21:03 Yeah. Is it fair to imagine that there's three categories here? There's sort of living, organic beings, there are magically created creatures and there's technologically created creatures? Yes, I think that's a pretty good distinction. The fact that they describe Talos and Pandora and other of these artificial entities as made, not born, I think that's a really important distinction because it really draws the line between, as you say, human, non-human, artificial and natural. And I think that they're really emphasizing the manufactured nature of Talos and then Pandora. And I'm sure that the boundary lines here are a little fuzzy, right?
Starting point is 00:21:48 I mean, they didn't exactly know what technology could do. So there's a little bit of magical thinking going into it. But also, there seemed to be a little bit of ambiguity about how human some of these machines were. I mean, I know in the Ray Harryhausen movie, It seems like Talos maybe has feelings, you know, or at least he has some emotion, like he feels bad when he's being defeated. Is that fair to say? That's right. I mean, you could, in the original myth of Talos, which was actually the first written description of Talos comes from Heesiod, the poet Heesiod, who lived around the same time as Homer.
Starting point is 00:22:23 So Talos was first described in about 700 BC. and he is described as a kind of, I guess you could say cyborg, because he is sort of half human, half machine. And that line is, as you say, it's blurry, and it's never really resolved whether he is all machine, you know, a sort of soulless machine, or whether he has a kind of consciousness or emotions. And in fact, yeah, the way he's destroyed.
Starting point is 00:22:57 we can talk about that too. That sort of brings that all into question too. Well, it's definitely one of the many ways in which the stories you recall in your book prefigured debates we're having right now, right? You know, what is the dividing line between artificial intelligence or a conscious creature like an organic being? And they were, I mean, maybe they, I don't know, I should ask you rather than just guessing, did they ever wonder about that? Was there any ancient discussions of that? about, you know, at what point would an artificial being count as human? Well, I think the story of Talos really brings that to the forefront in the way he was finally destroyed.
Starting point is 00:23:40 He was destroyed because Jason and the Argonauts were lucky enough to have Medea, who was kind of a techno wizard. She had fallen in love with Jason, so she was along with them. and she's the one who figured out how to neutralize Talos. Otherwise, Jason and the Argonauts would have been killed by this killer robot. Medea figures out, okay, she knew his inner workings, and she knew that he was powered by ICOR, and that ICOR bestows immortality on the gods, but she figured out the whole system depends on that bolt on his ankle.
Starting point is 00:24:20 And if I can get him to allow me to remove that bolt, then this immortal I-Corps, the power fluid, will bleed out and he will be destroyed. And so she plays on his emotions. She persuades him. She tells Talos that she can make him immortal. And of course, that's a kind of human desire, isn't it? He wants to become invulnerable. He wants to go on forever. and she says, I can make you immortal, but only if you allow me to remove that bolt on your ankle.
Starting point is 00:24:55 And he agrees to that. Now he's stepping out of the role of a pure machine. He's making a decision that his makers and the people who deploy him, they weren't expecting him to be able to have this kind of agency, this kind of desire and this kind of human ability to make a bad decision. Yeah, it seems like bad programming, honestly. All he was supposed to do was run around Crete and throw boulders. He wasn't supposed to be thinking about immortality.
Starting point is 00:25:25 That's right. But she persuaded him. And she and Jason removed the bolt. And we know that this is a very ancient version of the story because we have vase paintings from the 5th century BC that actually show Jason kneeling by this large bronze man and he's using a tool to remove the bolt on the bronze man's ankle. And Talos is swooning, falling back, reeling off balance.
Starting point is 00:25:57 And you can see that he's made of bronze. He's painted like ancient artists painted statues or bronze armor. And yet he's very humanized. His eyes are rolling up. And one artist actually painted a teardrop falling from his eye. So they really did humanize him. even though they thought of them as made of bronze. So you've got all those questions,
Starting point is 00:26:22 all those questions that seem so modern to us are kind of embedded in this story. Well, one of the things that seems absolutely characteristic to me of Greek stories, and I'm not an expert, so, you know, again, fill me in. But there's people trying to do things and then getting their comeuppance for one way or the other, right? being hubristic, trying to fly or achieve immortality, and then paying some sort of terrible price. So I love the fact that even the android, even Talos, the robot, still has this kind of human failing.
Starting point is 00:26:59 That's right. Yes, Medea is kind of like a hacker. She figures out his point of weakness, the vulnerability, and she exploits it. And I think that's an interesting little modern. lesson for us, too. He's a product of technology, but he's taken down by technology. Yeah, it was a technological solution to a technological problem. That was very clever. Exactly. Everyone should have
Starting point is 00:27:25 Medea on their side if they're to be facing things like this. Well, from reading your book, I definitely get the feeling that Medea deserves more credit than she gets in the popular imagination. I mean, I think of the play, the Erippides play, and she's killing her children, and it's a tragedy
Starting point is 00:27:41 and things like that. But clearly, you know, was over and over again saving Jason from terrible things. That's right. The journey to the golden fleece. And as I like to call her a kind of techno wizard, because she is a sorceress, she has all this arcane knowledge of drugs and biotechnology, and she could rejuvenate people in her famous special golden cauldron by boiling powerful herbs and other drugs.
Starting point is 00:28:11 There's one story that she was asked by Jason to restore his elderly father's youth. And, you know, all cultures have these stories of the fountain of youth or rejuvenation stories. But the Greek story about Medea doing this really has a lot of biotechnological details in it. somehow she drew all the blood out of the old man's veins and then replaced his blood with a sort of secret concoction of plants and other ingredients that she brewed in her golden cauldron. It's really, really quite amazing. I think they're working on that in Silicon Valley right now, aren't they? Exactly, yes.
Starting point is 00:29:02 They really are. This is, they are. They are not just thinking about rejuvenation and extending human lifespan, but trying to think about immortality too. Historians of surgery have pointed out that Medea's sort of imaginary experiment, this is a myth, of course, that it kind of foreshadows modern blood transfusions. I mean, she withdrew all of his blood and replaced it. So that's sort of a prefiguring of what is called exchange or substitution transfusion, where patient's blood is completely bled out and then replaced with a donor's blood. And in the past, I think, 15 years, some blood exchange experiments have been carried out with young and old mice.
Starting point is 00:29:54 And they've been shown to rejuvenate the muscles and the livers of the older mice when their blood, is replaced with that of young mice. And so there are some startup companies here in Silicon Valley that are pretty excited about this. I think someone just issued a warning. I think some large health institution issued a warning saying that this wasn't probably not a good idea yet. Yeah, not yet. Well, you know, forward thinking people are always going to take the risks. But I wonder, you know, again, in contemporary culture, we think of science fiction.
Starting point is 00:30:31 as trading back and forth with technological advance. Sometimes a technological advance is inspired by science fiction. Sometimes it's the other way around. Do you think that there was any similar dynamic going on back then? Do you think that there was any slightly overly ambitious doctor who might have tried a blood transfusion based on stories like this? Or was it just a guess on the base of the poet? I don't really know how they would actually be able to try a blood transfusion like that.
Starting point is 00:31:01 I think it was pretty imaginary in this myth. But there are stories of people making models of birds' wings or kites in order to fly. And, you know, if you think about the story of Daedalus and his son, Icarus, Daedalus wanted to escape with his son. He and his son were imprisoned by Minos in the labyrinth that Daedus had built himself, but now it's a prison for him. He wants to escape, so he's a legendary, brilliant craftsman, not a god. He's imagined as a human.
Starting point is 00:31:39 He makes imitation bird wings, and he and his son fly off. He anticipates the weak points of his artificial wings. He tells his son, don't fly too high. The heat will melt the glue or the wax. Don't fly too low near the ocean. The ocean dampness will weaken the glue. and of course Icarus, he experiences the rapture of flight and he flies higher and higher. And of course, we all know the story that he plunged into the sea.
Starting point is 00:32:09 And sometimes that's taken as a story of hubris and that they got what they're deserved for playing God by trying to fly. But if you think about it a little deeper, Daedalus mourns his son and then he flies on. He ends up in Sicily. He escapes and continues his, his, uh, wonderful resume of marvelous animated statues. So they both did succeed in flying, but at a very high cost. I think maybe that's the, that would be the lesson to take from that story. Hi, my name is Lisa, and I'm a licensed psychotherapist, which means my work doesn't magically end when the session does. There are notes to write, appointments to manage, billing, insurance follow-ups, and somehow all that
Starting point is 00:32:53 admin used to creep into my nights and weekends. That's why I switched to simple practice. Simple practice is an all-in-one electronic health record built specifically for therapists with HIPAA compliant tools and high trust certification. So I don't have to worry about juggling systems or cutting corners just to keep things running. Scheduling, documentation, billing, insurance, client communications, even automated appointment reminders. It all lives in one place. And if you're starting or growing a practice, Simple Practice also offers a credentialing service that helps simplify insurance enrollment, which can be a huge lift when you're starting to scale. Right now, Simple Practice is celebrating Mental Health Provider Day
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Starting point is 00:34:08 We make it easy. Toyota, let's go places. Yeah, I mean, dataless sacrificed his son in the name of scientific experimentation. Sometimes that can't make an omelet without breaking a few eggs. I think that's something we all interesting. That's right. And it's interesting that he anticipated the weak points of his invention, too. Yeah, I think that these days were romantically invested in the Icarus part of the myth.
Starting point is 00:34:33 But you got to give Daedalus credit. He really figured a whole bunch of stuff out, at least according to the stories. And one of the things I wanted to ask was that's at least something where there's a chance that he was based on a real person or real people, right? Yeah, some people, some scholars have suggested that Daedalus was sort of meant as a kind of conglomerate of all the brilliant craftsmen who did actually. invent technologies or animated statues, things like that. And so he sort of stands for all of those real artisans and craftspeople. And everybody wanted to claim Daedalus Crete claimed him, and then Sicily claimed him. And then Athens, the city of Athens, actually revised all the myths to make Athens his
Starting point is 00:35:27 birthplace. So everybody wanted him as a sort of founding inventor. And so what are the inventions he's credited with? I mean, the wings, obviously, the labyrinth, which doesn't seem like as hard as making wings that will make people fly. But he has, like you said, a long resume of inventions to his name. Well, one of the most infamous of his inventions was the artificial cow that he made for Queen Pacifay.
Starting point is 00:35:56 Oh, yeah, the cow. She was cursed with a perverse desire to mate with a bull in her husband, King Minos' pastures. She felt the gods made her fall in love with the bull. And so she asked Daedalus to make her an artificial cow so that she could enter the cow and, in that way, fool the bull into having sex with pacifay inside the cow. There are hundreds of images of this myth. Yeah, this is the favorite subject for artists. Yes, and it's really interesting in the middle age. It was also possible, also popular.
Starting point is 00:36:41 But they focus on the actual love story between the Pacifé and the bull. Oh, that's nice. Show her bringing flowers to this sort of love-sick bowl. But that's a kind of sex toy, if you think about it. I mean, she animates it by getting inside, so it's a kind of animated statue. Anyway, that was one of Daedalus's marvelous inventions. But then she gave birth. Yes, unfortunately, she gave birth to the Minotaur.
Starting point is 00:37:12 And there's a vase painting showing the baby Minotaur. I mean, we don't have very many images of baby monsters. But there's a vase painting that shows the baby Minotaur sitting on Passifay's lap, and she has a very startled look on her face, and her gesture is one of anxiety. It's a good reminder that even the monster Minotaur was a baby once too. I know. He had a mommy who loved him. And what else the Daedalus do after that?
Starting point is 00:37:49 Well, so Daedalus then invented the labyrinth as a place where King Minos could imprison his stepson, the Minotaur. It is very interesting to me reading your book, how much of what we know is not just textual, but based on these artistic depictions on pottery and so forth. It's clear that there was a set of stories that every artist in the ancient Greek and Roman world knew, and just loved painting. Yes, and it also is very helpful because we have to think of just realize how much of Greek literature has been lost. A lot of these myths, we only have incomplete texts
Starting point is 00:38:39 or fragments. And so the vase paintings can give us hints about what has been lost and versions of the story that have been. loss. So they can also confirm things like the, um, the vase painting I mentioned of, of Jason using a tool to, to remove the bolt on Talos's ankle. That's important for showing just how old that story was. Right, right. And it, but it goes back even further than that, right? And so there's, there's a section in your book about Prometheus, the Titan, um, constructing, if you want to put
Starting point is 00:39:15 it that way, human, the human race itself, right? So is, is there a, sense in which we, human beings, count as, you know, robots in the sense that we were originally created rather than born? That's, of course, a very deep philosophical question there, Sean. Yeah. They didn't know about evolution, right? So, you know, they had to have some story. And so are we all robots?
Starting point is 00:39:40 And in fact, Plato does bring that up in one of his dialogues. He says, let us imagine that we are puppets made. by a capricious God. So they thought about those questions. And of course, I think that in Buddhist cultures, they have different ideas about robots and automaton than Western cultures. I haven't delved too deeply into this,
Starting point is 00:40:05 but the few ancient stories that I did find that were Buddhist texts about automaton, the messages seem to be something like, we are all robots. robots don't have souls and neither do we. So I think that that would be very interesting to look deeper. It's always a little tricky, right? Because obviously they didn't have the exact words robots in Android and cyborg or something like that.
Starting point is 00:40:32 So we have to sort of remember that they were just talking about exactly the same concept and different words than we would use. Right. And recently I was writing about the ancient legend from Indian. about Buddha's relics, his bodily remains being guarded in antiquity right after he died by a set of robotic warriors. And they did have a word for what we would call robot or automaton. They called them spirit movement machines. They had a word for machine and then they called them spirit movement machines. And they had a word for robot makers.
Starting point is 00:41:16 So, yes, it's really hard to tease these words out. You have to do a lot of reading. These things are not indexed. Do you think that spirit mover machine, what is the word spirit doing in there? I think that that emphasizes the mysterious origins of their movements. Okay. But the fact that they are machine, the third word is machine, yantra. which means some mechanized entity.
Starting point is 00:41:51 Well, it's clear from your book that many of the uses that people imagined for these artificial beings is wartime, right? You know, fighting battles. I guess, you know, I'm not sure whether there were lots of battles being fought or whether just when he went down to write stories. It was the most fun to write about battles. But clearly, there's stories of artificial soldiers and elephants. And it's a lot of fun, really. Yes, well, and as we mentioned earlier, a lot of the Greek technology was focused on making novel war machines. So various rulers did actually hold contests for artisans and inventors to design and make innovations in war machines.
Starting point is 00:42:39 And that's how Philip II came up with the torsion catapult. He held a contest for that. And, you know, this kind of, this brings us to the question that many people are worried about today is that does technology favor tyranny or totalitarianism? Yeah, yeah, I went into a much more benign direction. I thought of the XPRIZ. You can talk about that, too, yes. You know, it's interesting if you think about Hephaestus, the wonders that he made in his work, shop.
Starting point is 00:43:17 Many of them were for the gods and goddesses. They called on him when they required devices with some spectacular features and magnificent beauty and craftsmanship. He created Talos, but he also had a big list of wonders, long resume. He made golden hunting dogs, animated statues of watchdogs that were described in Homer's Odyssey and Homer's Iliad. tells us that Hephaestus made a set of automated bellows for his forge. These bellows could obey his commands and regulate their blast to blow more or less air as he worked.
Starting point is 00:43:55 And then he devised a wondrous fleet of these tables, tables, tripods, three-legged tables on wheels that were self-driving carts. They brought nectar and ambrosia to the gods and goddesses at their banquets. And they returned when they were empty. And he made automatic gates from Mount Olympus, the heavens, that would automatically open and close. These are, you know, driverless carts and automated garage doors. And he also made a team of life-size golden maids to serve as his assistance. And Homer describes these robotic servants as looking exactly like real young women, but that they were endowed with sense and reason
Starting point is 00:44:41 and that they were equipped with all the knowledge of the gods. And in other words, that amounts to a mythological version of artificial intelligence. And that's written more than 2,500 years ago. But just as you said, when you first asked this question, these things are all very benign and harmless and kind of charming, kind of fun to imagine. It's when these made-not-born things come down to earth like Talos or Pandora, that they, well, Asimov's laws get broken.
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Starting point is 00:46:10 Simple Practice is an all-in-one electronic health record built specifically for therapists with HIPAA compliant tools and high trust certification. So I don't have to worry about juggling systems or cutting corners just to keep things running. Scheduling, documentation, billing, insurance, client communications, even automated appointment reminders. It all lives in one place. And if you're starting or growing a practice, simple practice also offers a credentialing service that helps simplify insurance enrollment, which can be a huge lift when you're
Starting point is 00:46:37 you're starting to scale. Right now, Simple Practice is celebrating Mental Health Provider Day with an exclusive offer. Up to 70% off for one year. Yes, up to 70% off for one year. But hurry, offer ends May 15th at simplepractice.com. Simplepractice.com. Well, it's also, it's very interesting to me that has faced us, who's clearly sort of based on a super blacksmith, right? You know, someone who would forge weapons and armor and things like that. Clearly, I guess, you know, they imagined if you're a god and a blacksmith, then you're also a wizard inventor, you know, even at a time when inventing new things was not common currency. Yeah, and as you mentioned before, I think there was a lot of overlap between magic and technology and antiquity, especially with metalworking.
Starting point is 00:47:26 because just the things you could do with bronze to an ordinary person would seem like magic. And you're using fire and molten metals and forging something that can move or look real. And you could even use real things to cast bronze. So that's one of the things that Daedalus was famous for was that he made a golden honeycomb that looked exactly like a honeycomb. Well, that's what a goldsmith could do if they cast the gold on a real honeycomb, but it seemed like magic in antiquity. I have more things about Hvestis to talk about, but I don't want to, before I forget, I want to go back to Jason because I forgot about the dragon's teeth story, which is a great one. And again, has amazing modern resonances. Yes, it does. Jason had to accomplish these impossible tasks in the myth of the quest for the golden fleece,
Starting point is 00:48:35 and one of them was that he had to tame or somehow subdue a pair of robo bronze bowls. These were robot bulls made of bronze, created by Hephaestus, for the king who happened to be Medea's father. He's the one who set this task for Jason, and he said, you need to yoke these bronze fire-breathing bowls and then plow a field. Oh, and here's a helmet full of dragon's teeth. You need to plant these dragon's teeth in the furrows, and from these dragon's teeth will spring up an unnatural army. And that's the crop that you will have to harvest. You need to cut down that army. If you can accomplish all that by nightfall, then I'll tell you where the golden fleece is. You know, we make fun of James Bond movies for having the villains come up with these cockamamie schemes, but it clearly goes back a long time
Starting point is 00:49:40 before that. Absolutely. Medea creates a special drug, once again, made from I-Corps, to give Jason's superhuman power. This is like a human enhancement that she makes in a drug form for Jason so that he can overpower those bronze bulls that are snorting fire. The effect only lasts one days, but gives him superhuman strength. And the description in the myth is quite interesting. He sounds like he's turning into the Hulk. He's normally a very skinny guy as we see in vase paintings. He's shown as a very unassuming physique, but she gives him this drug and he turns into a strong man able to do all these tasks. And sure enough, by dusk, they see that these soldiers are popping up, fully armed, unnatural army, popping up out of the furrows that he has plowed and planted the dragon's teeth.
Starting point is 00:50:44 And now these soldiers are, they're fully armed. and they're programmed to attack. They can't be commanded or led. They can't stop or halt or change direction. They can only attack. So once again, Medea to the rescue. She figures out their vulnerabilities, and she advises Jason to throw rocks into their midst.
Starting point is 00:51:16 And he does that, and it works, just like Medea said it was. they feel the blows or sense the blows on their shields and believe that they're being attacked and they're programmed to attack. And so they attack whatever is closest to them. They attack each other. So they're just in a frenzy hacking at each other. And then Jason and the organauts go and finish them off.
Starting point is 00:51:40 So once again, Medea is the one you want on your side. And that's a very realistic sort of technological worry about, you know, slightly bad programming, right? I don't know if you know the story of the Lord of the Rings movies. Yes. So, you know, they had all these armies orcs of orcs that were all CGI, and they programmed them individually to sort of make it look realistic, but some of them would just sort of look for the nearest person to fight and didn't see anyone, so just would run away from the battles.
Starting point is 00:52:11 And it looked like the whole orc army was just running to the three wins. So programming these instructions accurately is a harder trick than it might seem like. That's right. And what happens if you want to actually, if the circumstances change and you need to reprogram them or interrupt their train of behavior, pretty difficult? One ancient writer said, well, every general would want an army like this, but I don't think so. Yeah, they need some judgment. Very, very difficult to control if the circumstances suddenly change. And as some people have said, we need to make AI artificial intelligence that knows when to ask for help from a human. I mean, I probably know the answer to this, but did any of these ancient sources go into any detail at all about programming or how the instructions were put into these robots?
Starting point is 00:53:12 You know that once again, I'm going to appeal to the fact that we have such incomplete record. We do have so many details about Talos, and yet for many of the others, we don't have, we don't have the details that might have existed in antiquity. I haven't found any examples of details of programming. Yeah, that would be pretty advanced. I wouldn't be surprised if it wasn't there, but, I mean, it would be curious. Well, there is an interesting recent discovery of a, Papyrus that tells a, it was founded in the 70s, I believe, that has a story of a guardian lion that was built by Hephaestus to guard an Aegean island.
Starting point is 00:54:01 And the papyrus says that special instructions for the benefit of all mankind were placed in the lion. So there's a, there's a, that's an, that's the most beneficial. AI robot that I know of from antiquity that came to Earth that was put placed on Earth. It's the only beneficial one I can think of, actually. But was programmed by Hephaestus to be a benefit to all mankind. Well, yeah, so speaking of Hephaestus and speaking of benefits to all mankind, I was trying to think of, you know, how to sort of characterize all of the different kinds of robots and AIs that he talked about in the book.
Starting point is 00:54:45 So there's androids, right? There's robots in human form. There's human enhancement, like what Daedalus does with the wings and the various attempts at immortality through blood transfusions. And then, of course, there are sex robots. Yes. And we can thank Hephaestus for that. Is that right? That's right.
Starting point is 00:55:03 Hephaestus, once again, is commissioned by Zeus, who is always portrayed as a very vindictive, harsh tyrant in these myths. So once again there you have tyrants seeking out people who can make technology. He wants to punish humankind for accepting the gift of fire from Prometheus. Prometheus not only made humans but then wanted to defend them and compensate for their vulnerability by giving them the technology of fire. Well, he was punished for that, and Zeus then wants to punish humans as well. So he asks Hephaestus to make an artificial woman as beautiful as a goddess, but he specifically says that this entity who is made not born will arouse lust in men, and she will be evil disguised as beauty.
Starting point is 00:56:09 So she's an evil fembot who is created by Hephaelot, who is created by Hephaest. specifically to carry out a mission on earth. She has this sealed jar or urn. It later became a box in the Middle Ages because of a mistranslation. But she has a mission on earth. She is to insinuate herself in human society and then unseal that jar, releasing all the miseries and sufferings of mankind. And then we never hear over again.
Starting point is 00:56:41 Well, I have this vague feeling that, I was taught that Pandora was the first woman, almost like a precursor to Eve in some versions of the story. Are there different versions, or were she always robotic? Or once again, the boundary line is just very blurry here? In the very earliest text we have of the story of Pandora, comes from Hesiod, the poet, epic poet, hecied, who wrote the story twice in two different works in about 700 BC. He lives in around the time of Homer. So this is an extremely ancient story.
Starting point is 00:57:15 And once again, he's drawing on oral traditions. And he does not describe her as the first woman. He describes her as made, not born, and a product of technology. From the very beginning, she's not said to be the first woman, but I think she gets sort of overlaps with Eve as the story gets perpetuated. And we all think of the sort of a very benign fairy tale version of Pandora, that she was an innocent young woman who just couldn't restrain her curiosity. And that is not the original story at all. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:52 I mean, I'm going to return to this theme once again because I think it's very interesting about how many of these stories are ultimately cautionary tales, right? Yeah. And it's weird to think that they were cautionary tales about the dangers of technology. since those dangers were not very manifest at the time. That's right. But as I say, these are kind of science fiction. So they're imagining what wonders could be created if only possessed the creativity and the divine abilities of the gods.
Starting point is 00:58:26 Or someone like Medea. So, yeah, that's right. It is interesting that they seem to be cautionary. they do have lessons for us. Is it just the idea that reaching too far and being hubristic is something to be warned against, and this idea of manipulating nature through technology is just one illustration of that? Well, I did notice that, and I think I just mentioned earlier, that these self-moving devices and automatones that Hephaestus made for his own use
Starting point is 00:59:05 and the use of the gods and goddesses in heaven are all harmless and benign and charming. But the ones that are sent to Earth to interact with humans are dangerous. We've got the killer robot, Talos and Pandora, and then the various guard dogs and lions and creatures like that. So maybe this lesson in the myths
Starting point is 00:59:31 or something that we can draw from them is that maybe they're trying to say that it's interesting to think about in a sort of abstract way. But if these technologies are going to interact with humans, we need to think them over. And, of course, the story of Pandora really emphasizes that when you think about the relationship between Prometheus and his brother Epimetheus in that story. Pandora's... That relationship was, yeah. Yeah, they're brothers, Prometheus. and Epimetheus. Prometheus is the one who made the humans and then gave them fire.
Starting point is 01:00:14 His name means foresight. He looks ahead. His brother, Epimetheus. His name means hindsight. He's short-sighted. He never looks ahead. The Greeks are capable of humor in these myths. Well, I was going to say you're just predestined by your name to have certain characteristics. It's a tough life. Maybe they were named later. I don't know. So Epimetheus is the perfect patsy for Zeus's trick on humans, this cruel trick that he's going to play. He sends Hermes, the messenger god, to escort Pandora down to Earth. And he presents Pandora as a bride to Epimetheus.
Starting point is 01:00:58 and Epimetheus is dazzled by her beauty, but Prometheus tries to stop him from accepting this gift. He says, this isn't a gift. Do not accept any gifts from Zeus. Please do not do this. And Epimetheus shrugs him off and goes for the short-term gain. And as Hesiod, the poet in 700 BC tells us he realizes error too late. Is there also some sort of warning against the wiles of women going on here?
Starting point is 01:01:34 Or is it mostly technologically, you think? I think that it could be interpreted that way, but mostly I think it's a story of caution. I mean, when you think about the role of hope in the story of Pandora. Now, if we think of the fairy tale version, we've all seen the illustrations of Pandora sort of reeling back in horror when she opens this sealed box or jar. But actually, that was her mission. And the last thing in her jar in that sealed vessel, it was Hope, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:02:11 And we're used to seeing illustrations from fairy tales, European fairy tales, that show Hope is this sort of beautiful fairy who arrives, flies up out of the jar and comforts humankind. But that's, once again, that's not what the original myth said. In antiquity, Greeks did not think of hope as a good thing. Hope was called blind hope. It robs you of foresight. It makes you into an epimethean character.
Starting point is 01:02:43 You can never look ahead. So they really, and they really thought, we know that they really thought about that a lot because there are some fragments of plays about Pandora and Prometheus where Prometheus talks about the meaning of hope and blind hope and the question unresolved in the play and in philosophical arguments was hope the best thing or the worst thing in Pandora's jars. Is hope a good thing for humans or a bad thing for humans? I mean, would it be fair to say that the meaning of hope in this context
Starting point is 01:03:18 is closer to something like wishful thinking? I think so, yes. We certainly have a lot of epimethean types in AI and robotics who assure us that we're so innovative and creative that we'll be fine. We'll be able to solve all the problems as they come up. And then we have Prometheans who say we need to step back and try to think about unexpected, unintended consequences if we possibly can. Yeah, the two attitudes are never going to go away. They just need to be in conversation with each other in an intelligent way, which is all we can hope for. Now, I'm sure there's many other stories that are in your wonderful book, and I encourage everyone to buy it.
Starting point is 01:04:01 But in our last few minutes here, I wanted to completely switch topics. Maybe it's not a complete switch. You tell me, but you've written a whole other book, which I thought was fascinating about Amazon's. And I've seen Wonder Woman. I know about the Amazon's, but I think, I haven't read that one. I'll confess, but I think you make the case that the myth of the Amazon's was based to a surprising degree on real-life events. Is that right? Yes, I make that case in my book, The Amazons, Lives and Legends of Warrior Women across the ancient world. If you've heard of
Starting point is 01:04:39 the myths of Amazon's, then you know that they were fierce warrior women from exotic lands to the east. They lived around the Black Sea and beyond all the way to Central Asia. And what I wanted to emphasize is that the myths of the Amazons were probably influenced by real women who rode to war alongside the men in cultures around the Black Seas on the steps that were known to the ancient Greeks and that their lifestyle was so egalitarian when it came to male and female roles that the Greeks really spun many exciting stories about Amazon's. And the reason I feel I could make that argument is that there are some spectacular and recent archaeological discoveries of the graves of hundreds of battle-scarred female skeletons buried with weapons, just like the men,
Starting point is 01:05:41 given honors like the males and buried with their weapons and their horses in about the 5th century BC and onwards all across the steps around the Black Sea and all the way. And so it's not that there was an entire society of nothing but women warriors, which sort of would fail to be reasonable for all sorts of reasons. For all sorts of reasons, yes. and even the Greeks told other stories about Amazon's who actually did have relationships with men in their myths. But the exaggeration of this egalitarianism
Starting point is 01:06:21 led to stories of a society of nothing but women. And part of it was just that the Greek fighting style, which was sort of kind of brutish and hand-to-hand, would naturally favor the, you know, taller, stronger men, whereas the societies, the cultures on the steps were more riding on horseback, shooting bows and arrows, things that women could do just as well as men could. Absolutely. The Greek style of warfare was on foot, heavily armed, all armed exactly the same and all taught the same tactics, hoplight soldiers who would march in a phalanx out to meet
Starting point is 01:06:59 the enemy who would be another force of similarly armed and trained men. But the Scythians, their ancestors were the people who domesticated the horse and perfected the recurve bow. So these cultures of Scythian nomads, the very diverse cultures, but they were culturally related because they all were centered on archery. and riding horses. And if you put a woman on a horse with a bow and arrow, she's just as fast, just as deadly as a man. And their lifestyle was egalitarian because it was a necessity for their survival. Everyone in the tribe learned to write horses when they're toddlers, and they learn to
Starting point is 01:07:48 shoot bows and arrows. Everyone could hunt. Everyone could defend the tribe. It's just a necessity. So they dress the same in long pants or leggings, trousers, because you have to have those to ride a horse and long sleeves. Very practical, active wear for both the men and women. And their whole society just astounded the Greeks because they kept their women at home weaving and taking care of children. They didn't have an outdoor life at all. And everyone thinks that their own local customs, should be laws of nature, right?
Starting point is 01:08:25 So the idea that other people do it differently is hard to fathom. That's right. So I think that led to this outpouring of Amazon tales, which everyone knew these stories by heart. They knew about all the stories of their greatest Greek heroes had to prove themselves by fighting noble enemies, right? Among those noble enemies were the Amazon queens. So, I mean, both of these big stories, the one about the robots and our artificial intelligence ideas in antiquity and about the Amazon's. They're a wonderful reminder of how the debates that we have in the modern world are
Starting point is 01:09:04 prefigured in debates we've been having for a very, very, very long time, right? And I think it's just a wonderful example in both cases of how we can still learn and expand our minds and maybe make ourselves a bit more cultured by remembering what people were debating about 2,000 and 3,000 years ago. Absolutely. All right, Adrian Mayer, thanks so much for being on the podcast. Thank you. What if you could have even more and more and more help to pursue your goals?
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