X-Men’s Mutants and The Rise of AI: A Reflection on a New Dominant Entity

The rise of artificial intelligence’s impact on human society could possibly parallel the societal ramifications that the rise of ‘mutants’, humans born with extraordinary powers, had on human society in the X-Men universe. A comparison of the human/mutant conflict in the X-Men universe and how artificial intelligence is manifested in reality demonstrates the parallels between the rise of a superior entity. Exploring these ideas in science fictions shows us that a conflict between the two is inevitable. Further investigation in the two scenarios also highlights that there have been some attempts at cooperation between the two opposing entities. Reflection upon these investigations shows us that the success of these cooperations could save humanity from possible extinction.

Deconstructing the Two Rising Entities

The philosophy behind Magneto’s Brotherhood of Mutants is that mutants are to supplant the current human race as the dominant species on the planet, while Charles Xavier’s X-Men believe they need to work together to make the world a better place. From those explanations alone, it can be assumed that Charles is taking the moral high ground against the tyrannical regime of Magneto’s beliefs. This would be the case, if the mutants were not simply more human beings with exceptional powers. If they had different cultures and beliefs, the variance of the two species could simply be compared to that of two foreign cultures working together. But they are not. Mutants in the X-Men universe, are simply human beings who retain their culture, societal expectations, ethnicity, rationality (depending on the power) and happen to possess a supernatural power. Mutants, are arguably, human beings but better.

A parallel can be drawn to the rise of artificial intelligence in our own reality. The first supercomputers could calculate arithmetic at a pace that couldn’t possibly be reached by human beings. They went on to defeat humans at chess, a game considered to be the epitome of intellectual prowess, with even former world champion Gary Kasparov having no chance of being able to compete against them anymore. More recently, Google’s AlphaGO artificial intelligence defeated the reigning human champion at the game of Go. They have even conquered humans at our own quiz shows, with IBM Watson dominating human competitors at Jeopardy. Artificial intelligence has now reigned supreme at video games, defeating our species’ greatest competitors at DOTA 2. Besides board games and quiz shows, automating routine jobs has become a legitimate fear in the workplace, with many jobs that decades ago were thriving industries made redundant with robots doing the work for them, and AI learning how to do it. Even creative artists aren’t safe, with AI Amper releasing its own generated music to humankind. It is not a far-fetched thought to think that at some point in human history, machines will be able to undertake anything, intellectually, physically, or creatively, better than we can. Just as mutants are simply better than humans, machines could be simply better than us. Is there anything we can learn from this parallel? What might our impending doom look like?

Inevitable Conflict

Following the emergence of superhuman mutants on planet Earth, separating themselves from regular humans with their extraordinary powers, Erik Lensherr and Charles Xavier worked together save and foster any mutants that humans persecuted. Their actions were based on a mutual understanding that mutants represented the next stage in human evolution. Soon however, their visions began to differ, with Xavier seeing the mutants as the ones who would guide humanity and foster their co-operation, and Lensherr developing a more radicalized ideology, viewing mutants as the species to replace humanity, referring to them as ‘Homo superior’. This schism resulted in Lensherr splintering from Xavier, assuming the name Magneto and assembling his own team of mutants called the Brotherhood of Mutants, who fought for mutant supremacy. What started out as a peaceful idea of the mutant emergence, resulted into an inevitable clash between the two interpretations of the role of mutants in mankind’s future. Humanity already perceived mutants to be a threat to their existence, resulting in a conflict arguably within the laws of nature (e.g. survival of the strongest). This inevitable conflict between mutants and humans can be observed in science-fiction’s interpretation of the rise of artificial intelligence.

The philosophy of the inevitable conflict between humanity and artificial intelligence is wide-spread across science fiction. One modern demonstrable example are the Reapers from the popular RPG video game franchise, Mass Effect. On the surface, the Reapers appear to be a very cliched representation of a dominating AI, being highly intelligent machines that reside in dark space who appear every 50,000 years to cleanse the galaxy of organic life. The last installment of the original trilogy revealed that the Reapers pursue this 50,000 year genocide in order to annihilate any organic life that could possibly produce artificial intelligence. This genocide is pursued because they believe that the process of developing an artificial intelligence that causes conflict is inevitable. This hypothesis is somewhat proved (albeit through its own in-game lore) by the conflict between the Quarians and the Geth. In the series, the Quarians are a race of intelligent aliens, en par with humanity, who are forced to exist in a space armada due to losing their home world in a colossal conflict with the artificially intelligent beings they created, the Geth. This is an example of how if a race of superior beings were to come into existence amongst an established race (in Mass Effects’ case, AI robots and aliens), that a conflict between the two would be inevitable. Like in the case of humans and mutants, the main cause of the conflict between the two, is that one race is perceived to be ultimately superior to the other.

An Attempt at Co-operation

In stark opposition to Magneto’s philosophy of mutants ascending past humans to become the dominant species on the planet, Charles Xavier’s X-Men attempt to maintain the idea of humans and mutants co-existing in harmony. Charles Xavier himself believed that the differences between the two species were not to be distinguished as a superiority complex, but to be acknowledged as two different peoples who could benefit from each other. The extraordinary powers of the mutants could be utilized to help mankind with its problems, and mankind could foster the arrival of a new genetic species through its establishment on Earth itself.

This optimistic attitude towards co-operation could be applied to a possible future with artificially intelligent machines. The human mind simply cannot compete with the processing power of a computer when it comes to brute-force arithmetic and memory recollection, and contrastly, computers do not suffer the human’s biological weaknesses, such as mental fatigue or emotional compromise. However, humans currently have a vastly superior ability to recognize different faces, something machines are yet to achieve at human standard, and the complexities of human emotion and creativity have yet to be adequately understood by a robot. Viewing the differences between humanity and machine on a lateral basis, could open up ideas of a compromise between the two ‘species’, just like Charles Xavier’s ideal of the X-Men. This ideal that is already being theorized, by none other than Elon Musk.

Since early 2017, Elon Musk has been hinting at an experimental venture that could serve as a harmony between man and machine called Neuralink. The venture aims to help humans remain equals with advancements in artificial intelligence by merging human minds with software through implants in the brain. Elon himself described the venture as being an attempt at a “merger between biological intelligence and digital intelligence”. Such devices could close the gap in memory access and enable human beings to interface with computers at a thought-based level. Neuralink represents an idea to harmonize the emerging new entity, artificial intelligence, with the already established civilization, human beings, that parallels the philosophy of Charles Xavier’s X-Men. This attempt at co-operation between two different species/entities, basing their distinctions laterally rather than thinking one is clearly superior, could be the human races’ only chance at maintaining its survival in the face of rising artificial intelligence.

Is there any hope?

Amidst the evidence of conflict between the two different groups, and the inevitable conclusion that one group would rise to supplant the former, is there any hope of co-existence, or at least survival for the former group? The efforts of Charles Xavier have not been in vain in the X-Men universe, and there have been cases where humans and mutants have shown to co-exist and co-operate for the future of both species. One such example would be human Moira MacTaggert’s involvement with the X-Men. In the comic books, Moira is a world leading authority on genetic mutation and has worked as a collegue and researcher with Charles Xavier on the effects of mutation and its manifestation in mutants. She has since been involved in many comic book storylines, aiding the X-Men in their various adventures, using her knowledge as a geneticist to help the team of mutants where ever she can. Another example would be Hank McCoy. Hank himself is a mutant and part of the original X-Men team, but at one point of his comic book continuity became a mutant political activist, combating discrimination against mutant-kind at the political level, rather than through force like Magneto. In the film adaptation X-Men: The Last Stand, Hank is depicted as being the official secretary of mutant affairs for the United States government, working with the humans to preserve mutant rights. These are examples in the X-Men universe that depict how humans and mutants can work together and co-exist in harmony, despite their differences.

In regards to artificial intelligence, philosopher Nick Bostrom discusses different optimization processes undertaken by artificial intelligences could indirectly destroy humanity against our efforts. Tasking an artificial intelligence with making humans smile, an artificial intelligence could surmise that the most effect way to achieve this would be to take over the world and stick electrodes in the face of every human being, forcing a permanent smile. Similarly, if humans asked an artificial intelligence to solve a mathematical problem, it could surmise that taking over the world and turning the planet into a giant supercomputer could be the most effective solution. The idea that getting an artificial intelligence to solve a problem could itself be an instrumental reason to take over the planet. Bostrom argues that a artificial super intelligence could present serious problems for humanity in the future, and that cooperation would be rendered futile. One popular problem that he discusses is the problem of scalable control, where if a super intelligent machine’s ‘preference function’ to solve problems if not scaled to own interests, it could creating new technologies and shaping the world to its own preference function, which may not include the survival of the human race. Bostrom details that building an artificial intelligence that is on our side and continues to work in the best interest of humanity no matter how intelligent it is, to be a ‘very difficult problem’.

From many science-fiction interpretations of humans meeting superior beings, we can ultimately see that a conflict between the two is inevitable, be it mutants or artificial intelligence. Despite this inevitable conflict, there has been evidence in both science fiction and reality of a possible co-existence between the two entities, revolving around the idea of a lateral relationship rather than a superiority complex. This co-existence however has yet to be manifested in our reality, and may not be as simple as how it has been portrayed in science fiction, through the use of individuals with stakes in both parties. Overall, the rise of artificial intelligence can have serious ramifications for our society and our future as a species, and if we can learn anything from the conflict between humans and mutants in the X-Men universe, it is that this could lead to our extinction if we can’t figure out how to work together.

What do you think? .