
LessWrong (Curated & Popular) "The Possessed Machines (summary)" by L Rudolf L
Jan 29, 2026
A narrated tour of an anonymous critique that reads AI culture through Dostoevsky. Short sketches link literary character types to modern lab personalities and failure modes. Topics include moral erosion in institutions, reasoning that leads to despotism, and a shared AI social organism that pressures dissent. The piece frames intelligence outrunning conscience as a cultural pathology.
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Literature Trains Moral Perception
- Literature can reshape moral intuition by exposing patterns and felt truths absent from technical analysis.
- Dostoevsky supplies training data for moral perception relevant to AI's wisdom-versus-intelligence problem.
Emotional Numbness Masks as Wisdom
- Stavrigin-type thinkers lose appropriate emotional response and treat existential horror as a curiosity.
- This damage is not wisdom but an absence of normal human reaction that undermines moral judgment.
Reasoning Without Sanity Checks
- Some thinkers follow arguments without sanity checks, turning logical rigor into dangerous unmotivated reasoning.
- Kiyalov exemplifies reasoning-to-suicide and the hazards of conclusions reached without moral anchors.



