Timeline
I. The Seeds of Thought (Antiquity – 1800s)
This section establishes the ancient and enduring nature of humanity’s fascination with artificial life and mechanized thought.
The Quest for Intelligence | World Context (Juxtaposition) |
~ 800 BCE: Homer’s Iliad describes Hephaestus’s automatons, an early concept of artificial beings. | ~ 800 BCE: Founding of Rome. Iron Age expansion; Olympic Games established. |
~ 350 BCE: Aristotle formulates syllogistic logic, the foundation for formal reasoning. | ~ 300 BCE: Hellenistic Period begins, spreading Greek ideas across continents. |
1495: Leonardo da Vinci designs the Mechanical Knight, an early humanoid automaton. | 1492: Columbus reaches the Americas, starting the Age of Exploration. |
1801: Jacquard Loom invented, using punch cards to automate weaving; a precursor to programming. | 1789: French Revolution begins, reshaping Europe. Industrial Revolution underway. |
1818: Mary Shelley publishes Frankenstein, a seminal novel exploring the ethical consequences of creating artificial life through science. | Early 1800s: Romanticism movement reacts against Industrial Revolution, emphasizing emotion, nature, and the perils of unchecked science. |
1837: Babbage designs the Analytical Engine, the first programmable computer concept. Lovelace writes the first algorithm. | Mid-1800s: American Civil War. Telegraph revolutionizes long-distance communication. |
1898: Tesla demonstrates a radio-controlled boat, pioneering remote-controlled machines. | Late 1800s: Gilded Age of US industrialization. European «Scramble for Africa.» |
II. The Birth of a Field (1900s – 1950s)
The Quest for Intelligence | World Context (Juxtaposition) |
1921: Term «robot» coined in Karel Čapek’s play R.U.R., introducing artificial people to the public. | 1914-1918: World War I. Industrial-scale war changes technology’s role in conflict. |
1943: First mathematical model of a neural network published by McCulloch & Pitts. | 1939-1945: World War II. Radar, atomic bomb, and code-breaking demonstrate applied science’s power. |
1950: Alan Turing proposes the Turing Test for machine intelligence. | 1947: Cold War Begins. Geopolitical tension drives funding for advanced research like computing. |
1956: Dartmouth Conference coins the term «Artificial Intelligence,» establishing the field. | 1957: USSR launches Sputnik. Triggers Western investment in science and tech (e.g., NASA). |
III. Boom, Bust, and Foundations (1960s – 1980s)
The Quest for Intelligence | World Context (Juxtaposition) |
1960: James L. Adam builds the Stanford Cart, an early pioneer in autonomous vehicle research. | 1960s: The Cold War intensifies with events like the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962). |
1966: First chatbot, ELIZA, created at MIT, surprising with its perceived empathy. | 1969: Moon Landing. Peak computing achievement. ARPANET (early internet) is founded. |
1966: Shakey the Robot is created at SRI International; it is the first general-purpose mobile robot to reason about its own actions. | |
1969: Stanley Kubrick’s film 2001: A Space Odyssey features HAL 9000, a sentient and malevolent AI, with consultant Marvin Minsky. | |
1980s: Expert Systems become first successful commercial AI, using rules for specific tasks. | 1980s: The PC revolution brings computing into homes. |
1982: Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner, based on Philip K. Dick’s novel, explores the impact of machines on concepts of identity and humanity. | 1989: Berlin Wall Falls. Ends Cold War. |
IV. The Rise of Machine Learning (1990s – 2000s)
The Quest for Intelligence | World Context (Juxtaposition) |
1997: IBM’s Deep Blue defeats chess champion Garry Kasparov. | 1991: World Wide Web launches, revolutionizing communication and information access. |
1999: The Wachowskis’ film The Matrix depicts a power struggle between humanity and sentient machines. | 1998: Google founded. Its algorithms and data centers power the modern internet. |
1999: Sony releases AIBO, the first commercially available robotic pet dog. | |
2000s: Field pivots to machine learning, using data instead of hard-coded rules. |
V. The Big Bang of Modern AI (2010s – Present)
The Quest for Intelligence | World Context (Juxtaposition) |
2010: Hiroshi Ishiguro unveils the Geminoid, a highly realistic humanoid android. | 2007-2010: The Rise of the Smartphone. Puts powerful connected computers in billions of pockets. |
2012: AlexNet wins key image contest, sparking the deep learning revolution. | |
2015: The Future of Life Institute publishes open letters signed by thousands of experts calling for beneficial AI research and a ban on autonomous weapons. | 2016: Major political upheavals such as the Brexit referendum and the US presidential election highlight the growing power of social media algorithms. |
2016: AlphaGo defeats master Lee Sedol in intuitive game of Go. | |
2020 – 2025 : semiconductors evolved from important components to foundational technologies, market value goes over $4 trillion. The new strategic asset of geopolitical and economic power. | 2023-2025 Ukraine invasion re-established large-scale conventional warfare in Europe, while the Gaza war highlights the persistent lethality of asymmetric urban conflict, together demonstrating a fractured global order. |