Every Pharaoh demanded obedience. The machine asks for something more dangerous: trust.
What happens when humanity creates something powerful enough to replace not only our labor, but our sense of purpose?
Human beings have always needed something greater than themselves. For centuries, that need was answered by faith, family, and community. Today, a machine is raising its hand - and billions are already listening.
In Machine Pharaohs, Bahta Yohannes argues that artificial intelligence is not merely a technological revolution. It is a civilizational and spiritual turning point.
Drawing from economics, political theory, history, theology, and the prophetic tradition, he explores how societies may gradually surrender freedom not through force, but through convenience; not through oppression, but through comfort; not through chains, but through dependence.
As machines increasingly mediate reality, humanity approaches an ancient question with renewed urgency:
What are human beings for?
Woven throughout the book is a haunting allegory of five animals - the Ox, the Raven, the Lion, the Hummingbird, and the Tortoise - whose struggle mirrors our own search for freedom, memory, purpose, and truth in a world increasingly governed by machines that do not know we exist.
Machine Pharaohs is not a book about technology.
It is a book about worship.
It is not a book about artificial intelligence.
It is a book about what it means to remain human.
And the ancient prophetic tradition that outlasted every Pharaoh has not gone silent.
"The cage is voluntary. The key is remembering you have hands."