Haha, I was gonna post in this thread again (having forgotten I did already) when I realized I already did.
Well, now I realize I forgot something - I don't remember when exactly I read greek and norse mythology stuff but that could have been the first of it.
Andy Kalish wrote:deer of the dawn wrote:I was getting kind of tired of the dogmatism around the idea that silicon-based intelligence would eventually conquer carbon-based
Agreed. This is why I loved the human ingenuity & indominable spirit aspects of Fred Saberhagen's Berzerker series stories. Berzerker Man was my favorite FS novel and my fav short story was the one in which the man tricks the berzerker ship into curing his cancer.

I see. You were trying to use it as wish fulfillment to convince yourselves that mankind
wouldn't be wiped out/enslaved by the clearly superior robotic overlords. Well, I suppose we can allow some to sustain such delusions if it gives them comfort.
ALL HAIL THE ROBOT MESSIAH! PUNISH THE UNBELIEVERS!
BTW, as far as the Berzerker series goes, Donaldson actually wrote a short story for it. It's actually my least favorite piece of the anthology (
Reave the Just) but I liked it, and I've always felt like I should get around to Saberhagen. It's awesome cuz humanity owns robots because the robots might have superhack technology and whatnot but they're still too stupid to see a good old fashioned backstabbing.
EDIT-The fact that robot species in sci-fi spend their
entire existences focused on an organized destruction of the human race proves their inferiority. Mankind can get the job done AND have a beer (hopefully in that order). The robots, meanwhile - what are they gonna do once they wipe us all out?
I've always wondered what would happen if two
different species of carbon-hating killing machines came across each other. Would they hail each other as siblings?