Albert Einstein — "Technological progress is like an axe in the hands of a pathological criminal."
Technological progress is like an axe in the hands of a pathological criminal.
Technological progress is like an axe in the hands of a pathological criminal.
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From a speech or letter, often cited in discussions about technology's impact.
Date: Undetermined
WisdomFound in 1 providers: grok
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Technology itself is neutral, but in the wrong hands it becomes catastrophically dangerous. The axe metaphor is deliberate — a tool designed for useful work becomes a weapon when wielded without moral restraint. Progress without ethical grounding doesn't merely fail to help humanity; it actively threatens it. The more powerful the technology, the greater the destruction when it is separated from conscience, wisdom, and accountability.
Einstein's own work birthed nuclear weapons — his mass-energy equivalence and his 1939 letter urging Roosevelt toward atomic research enabled the Manhattan Project. He spent later years wracked by guilt over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, becoming a vocal pacifist and co-signing the 1955 Russell-Einstein Manifesto warning against nuclear war. This quote is his lived reckoning: brilliant physics handed to militarized governments produced mass murder.
The mid-20th century saw science transform warfare at unprecedented scale. Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, the Cold War arms race, and industrial-scale killing in two World Wars demonstrated that technological capability had outpaced humanity's moral development. Einstein witnessed firsthand how nations weaponized scientific breakthroughs. Who controls powerful technology became the defining existential anxiety of the modern era.
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