EPISODE · Jan 11, 2026 · 29 MIN
4.4 Europe — The Forge and the Inferno
from A brief history of AI from ancient times to the present day · host Kristy Anamoutou
The Forge and the Inferno: How Europe Invented Artificial Intelligence on the Ashes of the Libraries It BurnedA forge is not only a place of creation. It is also a place of fire.In 1679, Leibniz conceived the binary system. In 1854, Boole formalized the algebra of logic. In 1843, Ada Lovelace wrote the first computer program for a machine that did not exist. In 1936, Turing invented the universal machine. In 1944, Tommy Flowers completed Colossus — the first electronic computer. Europe forged all the conceptual tools of artificial intelligence.But the inferno accompanied the forge. The women of Bletchley Park made up seventy-five percent of the staff. Joan Clarke worked alongside Turing on decrypting Enigma. Mavis Batey cracked the Abwehr code at nineteen. Their names were erased for decades.In Berlin, Konrad Zuse built alone the Z3 — the world's first programmable computer — in 1941. The Nazi regime was not interested. A bombing raid destroyed it. When history was written, Zuse was barely mentioned.Colossus preceded ENIAC by two years. But the Colossus machines were destroyed after the war, their plans burned. Tommy Flowers received orders to erase everything. The history of computing ignored this first for thirty years.Refugees fleeing Nazism — Einstein, Fermi, Goedel — enriched America with what Europe was losing. European colonialism destroyed elsewhere the knowledge systems it did not recognize.Europe forged the tools of AI. It also forged them on the ashes of the libraries it burned.
What this episode covers
The Forge and the Inferno: How Europe Invented Artificial Intelligence on the Ashes of the Libraries It BurnedA forge is not only a place of creation. It is also a place of fire.In 1679, Leibniz conceived the binary system. In 1854, Boole formalized the algebra of logic. In 1843, Ada Lovelace wrote the first computer program for a machine that did not exist. In 1936, Turing invented the universal machine. In 1944, Tommy Flowers completed Colossus — the first electronic computer. Europe forged all the conceptual tools of artificial intelligence.But the inferno accompanied the forge. The women of Bletchley Park made up seventy-five percent of the staff. Joan Clarke worked alongside Turing on decrypting Enigma. Mavis Batey cracked the Abwehr code at nineteen. Their names were erased for decades.In Berlin, Konrad Zuse built alone the Z3 — the world's first programmable computer — in 1941. The Nazi regime was not interested. A bombing raid destroyed it. When history was written, Zuse was barely mentioned.Colossus preceded ENIAC by two years. But the Colossus machines were destroyed after the war, their plans burned. Tommy Flowers received orders to erase everything. The history of computing ignored this first for thirty years.Refugees fleeing Nazism — Einstein, Fermi, Goedel — enriched America with what Europe was losing. European colonialism destroyed elsewhere the knowledge systems it did not recognize.Europe forged the tools of AI. It also forged them on the ashes of the libraries it burned.
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4.4 Europe — The Forge and the Inferno
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