Christopher Nolan. AFP Photo
The story of the invention of the atomic bomb told in the
new film "Oppenheimer" is a "warning" to the world as we
grapple with artificial intelligence, insists the movie's director Christopher
Nolan.
The British-born maker of "Memento",
"Dunkirk" and the "Batman" trilogy said he believes a lot
of the anguish around technology "in our imagination stems from (Robert)
Oppenheimer," the physicist who helped invent nuclear weapons during World
War II.
What he and his team at the Los Alamos Laboratory in the United
States did was "the ultimate expression of science... which is such a
positive thing, having the ultimate negative consequences," Nolan said.
Like back then, the startling advances in artificial
intelligence (AI) are raising similar fears about the dangers of a technology
with potentially uncontrollable consequences.
Some worry that AI could escape its creators and endanger
humanity, much like scientists and others fretted eight decades ago with the
dawn of the nuclear age.
"That was a moment in history. This is one too,"
Nolan's star Cillian Murphy – who plays the haunted scientist – told AFP while
the pair were in Paris to promote the film, which opens across the globe this
weekend.
"Artificial intelligence researchers refer to the
present moment as an 'Oppenheimer moment'," said Nolan, referring to the
first atomic tests, when some feared nuclear fission would lead to an
uncontrolled chain reaction that would pulverise the entire planet.
Those now working on AI "look at his story for some
guidance as to what is their responsibility – as to what they should be
doing," Nolan said.
"But I don't think it offers any easy answers. It is a
cautionary tale. It shows the dangers."
"The emergence of new technologies is quite often
accompanied by a sense of dread about where that might lead," he argued.
Dilemma
Nolan's drama turns on the dilemma this posed for the
scientists working on the Manhattan Project, the codename of the drive to
develop the bombs that were later dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
"They had lived through World War I and they were
trying to end World War II," he said.
Oppenheimer argued in vain for international control of
nuclear weapons, hoping it would lead to peace.
The director said many would argue that "actually some
stability in the world has been achieved through the existence of these
weapons.
"Personally, I don't find that reassuring, but it just
goes to show there are absolutely no easy answers to the dilemma."
The war in Ukraine has reawakened the threat of nuclear
Armageddon raising tensions between the superpowers not seen since the end of
the Cold War.
Actor Matt Damon, who plays General Leslie Groves, the head
of the Manhattan Project, said the last year has been a reality check that the
danger of nuclear disaster is still very much there.
"How did I forget about this? It's like the Cold War
ended and my brain played a trick on me and said, 'OK, let's put that away, you
don't have to worry about that anymore' -- which is absurd."
But as soon as Russia invaded Ukraine "suddenly
overnight it became the most important thing for us all to think about
again," said the 52-year-old star.
"Oppenheimer" is facing off against
"Barbie" in the biggest clash of Hollywood summer blockbusters, with
both opening on the same day in a duel the media has dubbed
"Barbenheimer".
/KN/
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