My formulation of what others have since called the “AI Effect”. As commonly quoted: “Artificial Intelligence is whatever hasn't been done yet”. What I actually said was: “Intelligence is whatever machines haven't done yet”. Many people define humanity partly by our allegedly unique intelligence. Whatever a machine—or an animal—can do must (those people say) be something other than intelligence.
These are two opposing visions of the relationship between human and machine: on the one hand (AI effect), the human being is something defined and stable, and the machine tries to imitate it, to become what the human being is. On the other, the definition of what it means to be human changes as machines become capable of doing something new. The essence of the human being is therefore the result of comparison with the machine. Cf. on this topic, the idea of Karen Barad on stabilizing and destabilizing boundaries which define what is human.