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The Teleautomaton

Tesla’s name for the machine that acts at a distance on transmitted intention—the 1898 radio-controlled boat that first posed, in working hardware, the question of where agency lives when a constructed thing appears to think.
In September 1898, Nikola Tesla floated a small iron-hulled boat in a tank at the Electrical Exhibition in Madison Square Garden, controlled it by radio waves from a box he held in his hand, and insisted to the crowd that what they were watching was not a trick or a toy but the founding demonstration of a new category of being. He called it a teleautomaton—a self-acting thing operated at a distance—and distinguished it from the theatrical automatons of earlier centuries that hid human agency inside a mechanical shell: his machine, he argued, did not conceal the agency but transmitted it, across empty air, and could in principle receive judgment from a source other than a human operator. The word he coined for this condition was a “borrowed mind,” and the phrase fits contemporary large language models with an accuracy he could not have intended: a system trained on the recorded output of millions of humans is operating on a
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