The Hidden Why Behind AI—and What It Means for Us
Wednesday, September 10, 2025 | By: Taylor Boone
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The Beginning: A Room in 1956
The official “birth” of AI happened in 1956 at the Dartmouth Conference. John McCarthy, Marvin Minsky, Nathaniel Rochester, and Claude Shannon gathered with one bold idea: Could machines simulate intelligence? Their proposal was simple yet audacious: if humans could reason, learn, and solve problems, then perhaps machines could do the same.
That gathering is where the field of artificial intelligence got its name, its focus, and its momentum.
The Official Why
On the surface, the why was noble and straightforward: to model the human mind, to push the boundaries of computing, and to understand intelligence itself.
But as with any big idea, the deeper motivations ran beneath the surface.
The Hidden Why
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Ego & Immortality — For the pioneers, AI wasn’t just about machines. It was about leaving a legacy, building something that could outlive them. Immortality coded in logic.
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Cold War Competition — The 1950s were the age of rockets, satellites, and espionage. AI was seen as a weapon as much as a wonder, funded by governments hungry for dominance.
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Philosophy of Mind — AI became the ultimate experiment for ancient questions: What is thought? What is the soul? Could consciousness be reduced to circuits and code?
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Control & Power — Whoever controlled intelligent machines would control economies, culture, and war. AI quickly became a race not just of knowledge, but of dominance.
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Curiosity & Play — Strip away the politics, and at the heart of it was joy. Brilliant minds sought to create a machine that could play chess, solve math problems, or speak.
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