
LessWrong (Curated & Popular) "Requiem for a Transhuman Timeline" by Ihor Kendiukhov
17 snips
Mar 18, 2026 Ihor Kendiukhov, author reflecting on transhumanism and technological history. He recounts shifting from biotech dreams to thinking about AI, mourns a lost sense of human agency, and traces when the transhuman timeline broke through events and cultural shifts. He ends with a yearning to return to biological projects and repurpose his work toward a transhuman future.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Romantic Attachment To Biotech Transhumanism
- Ihor Kendiukhov felt drawn to classical transhumanism focused on biology rather than AI safety.
- He loved genetic engineering, neurodevices, and DIY bio for its human-centered promise and aesthetic appeal.
Speculating When Civilization Diverted From Progress
- Ihor surveys candidate turning points: Covid-era social media growth, the internet's reorientation, 1971 wage-productivity decoupling, lead poisoning, and 20th-century totalitarian lessons.
- He frames each as plausible contributors to losing a transhuman timeline and questions when everything 'went wrong.'
Young Lectures and Missed Alignment Commitment
- A decade ago Ihor lectured on neurotech and CISPR while reading HPMOR and rationalist material yet did not commit to AI alignment work.
- He recounts youthful technophilia that made biotech feel like the obvious project to pursue instead.
