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Is there an Old World precursor to “Artificial Intelligence?” Automatons/ Brazen Heads/ Antiquitech

18m 28s2,622 words410 segmentsEnglish

FULL TRANSCRIPT

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Howdy y'all. Welcome back. Is there a

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precursor to modern artificial

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intelligence? As society is ushered into

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the modern age of computing, really,

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whether we like it or not, it appears

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nearly every aspect of our lives is

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being integrated with some form of

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artificial intelligence. While even the

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Wi-Fi in your home can effortlessly map

0:28

your environment, the question becomes,

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does anyone truly desire this invasion

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of privacy under the guise of new

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technology? Seeing many new faces here

0:39

visiting my channel lately has obviously

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erupted the comment sections in my last

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few videos into a place where some

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people seem to be a bit confused about

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who I am or what the goal of my channel

0:50

is. One, I will never and have never

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used AI on my channel. I feel like that

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goes without saying, but apparently

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there's hundreds of other channels out

1:00

there that are not so honest. Some new

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viewers have also claimed that my voice

1:05

is AI. For those of you that have been

1:08

here for years with my channel, those

1:10

comments are probably pretty laughable.

1:12

This is me. Take it or leave it, but I

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definitely ask that those of you who are

1:16

benefiting from the research that I

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share with you to be mindful of those

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trying to misdirect you. I'm here simply

1:24

to share with you the same research that

1:26

I conduct with my honest reaction to

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what I discovered mixed in with a review

1:31

of the currently accepted history. I

1:34

share the current narrative for a few

1:36

different reasons, but the main one

1:37

being to give you the ability to see the

1:40

anomalies in the narrative for yourself,

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as comparing the narrative to the

1:44

photographs tends to reveal tiny details

1:47

that may have slipped through an initial

1:49

viewing. I also share the current

1:51

narrative with you with at least a hint

1:53

of irony and sarcasm, which again, I'm

1:56

pretty sure you can hear it in my voice.

1:59

The photographs I share with you always

2:01

come from sources that are given with

2:04

the titles, locations, and photographers

2:07

for each image when applicable. I spend

2:10

hours daily researching because it's one

2:12

of my favorite things to do, and I find

2:14

myself within museums asking for the

2:17

oldest photographs. Private collectors,

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online forums, and historical archives

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round out the assortment of where I

2:24

locate these images for you. The

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fragmenting of our online collective,

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this research community is currently

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happening and it seems to be targeted

2:34

with channels like mine taking a brunt

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of the criticism for the work of others

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that are new that I really know nothing

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about. So be mindful as this channel is

2:44

a creation on my own with my research

2:47

being the basis for everything that I

2:49

discuss and share with you. There is no

2:51

outside influence on my channel other

2:54

than you, the viewer, and how my

2:56

research has helped you. Before the

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onslaught of AI flooded the YouTube

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landscape, I was already here making

3:03

these videos for you, and I plan to

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continue sharing my research with you

3:07

for as long as it helps you. However, as

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AI seems to be the hot button discussion

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over the last few months, with access to

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AI being pushed on nearly every person

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who actively uses technology, it becomes

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a rather daunting task to explain the

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origins of artificial intelligence.

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It appears that it wasn't always digital

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and rather than being made available to

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everyone like it is now, the oldworld

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version of this was coveted by kings,

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alchemists, and people claiming to be

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living gods. Jeffrey Chaucer's The

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Canterberry Tales was written between

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the years 1387

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through roughly 1400. In one tale known

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as the squire's tale, Gangask Khan and

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his family are celebrating the 20th

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anniversary of his reign in grand

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ceremony. A strange figure who

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identifies himself as a knight enters

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the Khan's doicile for the feast,

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presenting himself as a messenger from

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the king of Arabia and India. The

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messenger does not arrive empty-handed,

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bringing with him multiple seemingly

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magical items. The first is a brass

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horse, which can teleport, which we

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might see today as some sort of

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mechanical vehicle that traveled so fast

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the metaphor it could teleport was used.

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The other gifts are more unexplainable

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as the knight gives Genghis a magic

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mirror which would reveal the truth

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about the king's enemies and

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acquaintances. This motif would become

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very common during the Renaissance,

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depicting a sort of device with remote

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viewing capabilities. Think a crystal

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ball. The knight also gives the K a ring

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that was said to have empowered the

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wearer to both communicate with and

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control birds. And finally, Genghis also

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receives the master sword, which was

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said to have death touch or the ability

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to end the life of whomever it came in

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contact with. Reversely, this master

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blade was also said to have the ability

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to heal these wounds. While I truly

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don't have an explanation for the latter

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two gifts the con receive, I would like

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to focus more on the mechanical or

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automaton horse and the magic or talking

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mirror.

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The strange part here is right off the

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bat, the current narrative explains the

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repeated use of magic mirrors or crystal

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ballike devices and talking automatons

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throughout European history as caused by

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society placing allegorories on the

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alchemical teachings brought to Europe

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from the Islamic world. Yet in itself,

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that argument has many apparent holes,

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including the fact that for the most

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part, Europe forgot the alchemical

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teachings. the ancient sciences of

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Greece and Rome. And these concepts were

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only rediscovered when ancient Greek and

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Roman teachings were reintroduced to

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Europe from the Islamic world. For

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example, the well-known tallows, a

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gigantic man made of bronze, was known

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throughout ancient Europe as the

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guardian of Manoan cre. And the

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widespread documentation of automatons

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in ancient Greek and Roman sources is

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also wellnown. It's as if when Rome

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fell, the magic seemingly left the

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European world. This oddly goes hand

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inhand with architecture as well.

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According to the current narrative, the

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architectural principles that dominated

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the world from roughly the year 1300

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through roughly 1900, the same

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principles that are given credit as the

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source for the thousands of oldw world

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structures we have studied on my

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channel. Well, those principles of

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architecture were supposedly lost when

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Rome fell as Europe plummeted into the

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dark ages. What's strange here is as

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Europe basically forgot how to build

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magnificent oldw world architecture, we

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have the same sort of elegant Romanesque

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buildings being founded across the

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Middle East and Northern Asia. The

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reintroduction of alchemical teachings

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to Europe went handinhand with the

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rediscovery of Vuvius's work on

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architecture itself being a key facet

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that sparked Europe into the

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Renaissance. However, looking into when

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these mythical tales started to become

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accepted as fact, we actually have a

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talking bronze head first described in

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1125 appearing in the history of the

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English kings written by William of

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Msbury.

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In this tale that's recorded as being

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somewhat historically accurate, we're

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told that Pope Sylvester II kept, among

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other things, a magically imbued talking

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head made of bronze, which he had

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discovered on pilgrimage to the most

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sacred and secretive sites in the

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Moorish Iberian Peninsula. Furthermore,

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the passage goes as far as claiming the

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Pope had in his possession a cornucopia

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of sacred artifacts which he had taken

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from the Islamic world with the most

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prized of them not being the talking

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head but rather a tome of sacred

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knowledge which the article claims that

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Sylvester had to conquer a fallen angel

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to secure. This bronze head was said to

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    Is there an Old World… - Full Transcript | YouTubeTranscript.dev