One of BookAuthority's Three Best New Robotics Audiobooks To Read in 2019
Absorbing. . . . [Mayor is] an accessible and engaging writer.---Peter Thonemann, Wall Street Journal
In her new book, Gods and Robots, Adrienne Mayor draws comparisons between mythical androids and ancient robots and the AI of today. . . . Through detailed storytelling and careful analysis of popular myths, Mayor urges readers to consider lessons learned from these stories as we set about creating a new world with AI. . . . Wonderful storytelling, thorough research, and impressive expertise.---Sarah Olson, Science
A fascinating unpacking of ancient myths that feature robots and other lifelike beings, some of which bear an eerie resemblance to modern technology. . . . In her insightful analyses of these tales, Mayor is approachable and engaging, and she infuses many familiar stories with new energy in the context of technology. She adroitly explores the ethical aspects of artificial life, addressing big questions about sentience and agency through the lens of ancient ideas. She also makes a convincing argument that these imagined machines anticipated advances that are considered cutting-edge today. Ultimately, she leaves readers in awe of these thinkers who dreamed of 'androids' long before it was conceivable to build them. A collection of wondrous tales that present ancient myths as the proto-science fiction stories they are. * Kirkus *
The Greeks thought of everything, including sci-fi tropes such as androids and artificial intelligence, according to this lively study of mythology and technology. . . . Mayor's exploration of the endless inventiveness of the Greek imagination makes for an engrossing read. * Publishers Weekly *
It is a place where megalomaniac leaders with an insatiable appetite for knowledge develop artificial intelligence and robots that pose grave dangers to humanity. Silicon Valley? No, Greek mythology.---Mark Bridge, The Times
Dr. Mayor urges top tech bosses to closely analyse the stories of the Greeks as we close in on a future dominated by automated technologies.---Harry Pettit, Daily Mail
This is an excellent source book for confronting political and technological hubris then and now, the earliest arguable traces of modern fears.---Peter Stothard, The Spectator
The Greeks [Mayor argues] envisioned . . . advanced technological artifacts driven by internal machinery [and] establishes the engineered nature of androids like Talos and Pandora. [Her] close analysis finds echoes of real historical techniques [and] nicely refutes those critics who might claim that artificial life achieved through engineering was an idea beyond the conceptual horizon of the ancients.---William A. Wilson, Weekly Standard
[An] astonishing chronicle.---Barbara Kiser, Nature
Adrienne Mayor entertainingly re-examines the various versions of these myths that survive in written and visual form and speculates about their origins. * The Economist *
In Gods and Robots, Adrienne Mayor describes how, more than 2,500 years before the modern computer, people told tales of autonomous machines that could labor, entertain, kill and seduce. . . . 'The age-old stories,' she writes, 'raise questions of free will, slavery, the origins of evil, man's limits, and what it means to be human.'---Matthew Hutson, Washington Post
In a breezy and thought-provoking account, Mayor describes how ancient Greek, Roman, Indian and Chinese myths expressed hopes and fears about human-made life long before conversational robots and computer chess champions flexed their algorithms.---Bruce Bower, Science News
[A] brilliant book. * Enlightened Economist *
In her remarkable book Gods and Robots: Machines, Myths, and Ancient Dreams of Technology, Stanford Professor Adrienne Mayor gives a literate and creative history of the notion of delegating power and giving orders to man-made entities.---Michael Munger, American Institute of Economic Research
Beautifully written.---Candida Moss, Daily Beast
[A] masterful retelling of ancient tales.---Clara Bosak-Schroeder, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
There is much to intrigue the general reader, with enough to challenge the more academic reader.---Cath Milnes, Classics for All Reviews
Mayor's account works so well . . . because she assembles . . . fragments of images to generate a rich visual tapestry . . . The greatest strength of Gods and Robots is that it gives us a framework and a set of familiar stories with which we can negotiate our own times.---Michael John Goodman, British Society for Literature and Science
Gods and Robots turned out to be a fascinating book on an unusual subject. * The Inquisitive Biologist *
Adrienne Mayor writes jargon-free prose laced with wit.---Barry Baldwin, Fortean Times
The questions [Mayor] raises are significant and timely.---Ivana Petrovic, Greece and Rome
This is a wonderful 'eureka' book for anyone in search of the deep origin story of robotics and AI . . . and a possible epiphany for Marvel fans and science-fiction and fantasy readers looking for more back story on their favorite superheroes.---Emily E. Auger, Mythlore Journal
Gods and Robots is an excellent discussion of ancient ideas of technology and the potential such technology had to transform the ancient world and to inform the contemporary one. . . .[this book provides] a key introduction to the field of classical reception.---Alan Chadwick, Journal of Classics Teaching
Gods and Robots is an absorbing study of ancient mythological and historical automata that explores their origins and significance in the ancient and modern worlds. It will intrigue anyone interested in mythology, ancient and modern robotics, and the genesis of artificial intelligence.---Georgina J. Henderson, Technology and Culture