Wall-E, Conscious Machines and a Parable About Our Potential Extinction

Wall-E Pixar Movie

I love coincidence. Coincidence I mention because as I reach the end of John Gray’s book, Straw Dogs, for the third time in as many years, I read chapter 20, ‘The Soul In The Machine,’ an hour before leaving the cabin this weekend. On arriving home last night I caught up with Friday’s edition of the NYT and read a review of the new Pixar movie, Wall-E, by A.O. Scott. In the first paragraph of his review he tells us - “This is a world without people, you might say without animation, though it teems with evidence of past life.” He also mentions that in the first 40 minutes of the movie - “barely any dialogue is spoken.”

Another coincidence here is that it is as if the movie’s director, Andrew Stanton and his co-writer Jim Reardon, had also read the last few chapters of John Gray’s book. According to A.O. Scott the movie’s underlying theme is far from a happy one - “…… but ‘Wall-E’ surely breaks new ground. It gives us a G-rated, computer-generated cartoon vision of our own potential extinction. It’s not the only film lately to engage this somber theme. As the earth heats up, the vanishing of humanity has become something of a hot topic…”

The Earth devoid of humans, or at least where the remaining humans are reduced to living in cities “emulating the noble idleness of hunter-gatherers, their needs met by new technologies” as Gray writes, is an Earth left to conscious machines. The writers and director of Wall-E suggest that this has already occurred and conscious machines are all that remain on the planet. As he says - “Wall-E’s tender regard for the material artifacts of a lost civilization is understandable. After all, he too is a product of human ingenuity.”

“In his recent documentary Encounters at the End of the World the film director, Werner Herzog muses that “the human presence on this planet is not really sustainable,” a sentiment that is voiced, almost verbatim, in the second half of Wall-E.”

As Gray writes in his passage ‘The Soul of the Machine,’ - “Those who fear conscious machines do so because they think that consciousness is the most valuable feature of humans - and because they fear anything they cannot subject to their will. They fear the evolution of conscious machines for the same reason they seek to become masters of the Earth.”

Gray predicts - “As machines slip from human control they will do more than become conscious. They will become spiritual beings, whose inner life is no more limited by conscious thought than ours. Not only will they think and have emotions. They will develop the errors and illusions that go with self-awareness.”

That sounds like a movie called ‘Wall-E’ to me.

One other coincidence regarding the movie was that today I read a post by Seth Godin on his blog entitled “Bravery and Wall-E.” At first I thought from the title that by bravery he meant that we humans are brave to be advancing our technological know-how ever forward as we invent “living software” and biological chips, machines that Gray predicts will move us humans toward extinction. Unfortunately that wasn’t the case - Seth discussed the marketing [or lack of] and how the movie will make “plenty of money.”

The parable of ‘Wall-E’ transcends marketing and money.

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One Response to “Wall-E, Conscious Machines and a Parable About Our Potential Extinction”

  1. superagent Says:

    Right….proof that human life is not sustainable on this Earth because Pixar makes a movie about the earth being destroyed because of their own wastefulness….and then Pixar /Disney pumps out a bunch of toys for Wall-E that will ultimately find their way to a landfill…The ultimate irony.
    How can we contact them to ask for a little social responsiblity?

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