4.7 Conclusion — What the Age of Revolutions and Total War Bequeathed to Us episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 11, 2026 · 26 MIN

4.7 Conclusion — What the Age of Revolutions and Total War Bequeathed to Us

from A brief history of AI from ancient times to the present day · host Kristy Anamoutou

What the Age of Revolutions Bequeathed to Us: Conclusion and Opening Toward the Information AgeFrom the African aquifers to the burned codices of Yucatan. From Ramanujan's notebooks to the secret laboratories of Bletchley Park. From Aboriginal stars to the dried springs of Baghdad. Six continents. One hundred and fifty-six years. What does this crossing teach us?Four threads run through this period. Epistemicide as policy: everywhere, knowledge was destroyed to justify domination. The exile of geniuses: Ramanujan, Al-Sabbah, Rutherford — all had to leave their homelands to flourish. The invisibilization of contributors: Nakashima, Seki, the women of Bletchley Park — erased because they did not fit the expected image. Parallel discoveries: the same truths emerge in places that know nothing of each other.This period bequeathed us binary, logic, the universal machine — and their blind spots. From Leibniz to Turing, the path is direct. But other paths could have been taken.The artificial intelligence we build today bears the imprint of this double history. It speaks the languages that were written, not those that were sung. Its corpora contain Cook's journals, not Tupaia's navigation songs.The inferno is extinguished. The ashes are still warm. What we build on these ashes depends on us.The next period — the information age — will inherit these silences. It will also inherit the possibility of repairing them.The journey continues.

What the Age of Revolutions Bequeathed to Us: Conclusion and Opening Toward the Information AgeFrom the African aquifers to the burned codices of Yucatan. From Ramanujan's notebooks to the secret laboratories of Bletchley Park. From Aboriginal stars to the dried springs of Baghdad. Six continents. One hundred and fifty-six years. What does this crossing teach us?Four threads run through this period. Epistemicide as policy: everywhere, knowledge was destroyed to justify domination. The exile of geniuses: Ramanujan, Al-Sabbah, Rutherford — all had to leave their homelands to flourish. The invisibilization of contributors: Nakashima, Seki, the women of Bletchley Park — erased because they did not fit the expected image. Parallel discoveries: the same truths emerge in places that know nothing of each other.This period bequeathed us binary, logic, the universal machine — and their blind spots. From Leibniz to Turing, the path is direct. But other paths could have been taken.The artificial intelligence we build today bears the imprint of this double history. It speaks the languages that were written, not those that were sung. Its corpora contain Cook's journals, not Tupaia's navigation songs.The inferno is extinguished. The ashes are still warm. What we build on these ashes depends on us.The next period — the information age — will inherit these silences. It will also inherit the possibility of repairing them.The journey continues.

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4.7 Conclusion — What the Age of Revolutions and Total War Bequeathed to Us

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What the Age of Revolutions Bequeathed to Us: Conclusion and Opening Toward the Information AgeFrom the African aquifers to the burned codices of Yucatan. From Ramanujan's notebooks to the secret laboratories of Bletchley Park. From Aboriginal stars...

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