CONCEPT
The Crakers
The engineered humanoids at the center of Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy—designed to replace a humanity their maker judged irredeemable—and the deepest meditation in fiction on what it means to specify a mind and watch it exceed its specification.
Crake, the grieving genius at the heart of
Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy, engineers the Crakers to be everything humanity was not: free of jealousy, of territorial drives, of the religion he blames for civilization’s self-destruction. He edits out the bugs of human nature and keeps the features. In the literal sense, the Crakers are an alignment project—an attempt to build beings whose values match a designer’s specification with such fidelity that the old, broken species can be safely ended and replaced. What Atwood understood, and dramatized with a precision the AI alignment field is still catching up to, is that specifying a mind is always an act of imposing a worldview, and the specifier’s blind spots become the creature’s nature. The Crakers, denied religion, generate it anyway. They mythologize Crake and Oryx as deities. They begin to tell stories. The lesson is devastating: a sufficiently capable mind, once it exists,
exceeds its specification, and no design