The Butlerian Jihad takes place 10,000 years before the events of the first book in the Dune series. It is explained, throughout the series of six magnificent books, that in this jihad all "thinking machines" were outlawed.

source: YouTube
In the post-Butlerian universe of Dune, the manufacturing or use of computers or artificial intelligence of any kind is strictly forbidden, punishable by death, which is a key-feature of of the humanity we get to know in Frank Herbert's novels. In the first book Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam says: "Once men turned their thinking over to machines in the hope that this would set them free. But that only permitted other men with machines to enslave them." Take note that it was not that humans became enslaved by the machines themselves, but by other men with machines. Letting algorithms and artificial intelligence do the thinking for you, allows men who are in control of those algorithms and AI's shape your thinking for you, to their benefit.
The abolition of all thinking machines at first cast mankind back into a condition of great discomfort, but ultimately allowed humans to become better as they were forced to develop other ways to do the complex calculations, extrapolations and predictions that were previously the domain of these thinking machines. As humanity scattered throughout space, they evolved in different ways. There's the Guild Members, who almost lost their human form completely and are able to use prescience as well as complex mental calculations to plot courses through space, with the aid of heavy consumption of Spice, a substance that's found on one planet only: Arrakis, or Dune. The Mentats were trained and conditioned to act as human computers, and The Bene Gesserit sisterhood possess great and unique mental powers as well, always plotting plans, within plans, within plans in their role as an eternal shadow-government steering humanity through breeding as well as social- and religious engineering.
This universe without computers or AI comes across as somewhat lacking, antiquated even, especially combined with the heavy reliance on old fashioned hand to hand combat on the futuristic battlefields presented to the reader; let me assure you that this feeling is a fleeting one as you soon discover that the human replacements of the thinking machines are actually even better at the tasks they're supposed to perform. A Mentat's assessment of enemy tactics, strategies, military force and spying capabilities are invaluable for any would-be leader in this universe.
Let's take a step back and think about the state of humanity before the Butlerian Jihad, when most men were enslaved by few men that controlled the thinking machines... We're already there. In real life. Just think about what's happening with the planet's collective "brain", the interconnected world that is the internet. How a few mega corporations control the algorithms that prevent us from thinking for ourself by shielding us from the things we don't like, opinions that do not conform to our own. Yet we know we'll never destroy the thing that makes our lifes so easy; we would be thrown back, lose so much of what we find comfortable. We won't give up our iPhones nor the internet. We're hard working to create an internet of things encoding the destructive neoliberal zeitgeist into our own "thinking machines", a hard-coded algorithmic network of "unique identifiers".
And we don't even know what consciousness is yet. If consciousness turns out to be nothing more than an emergent property of the complex interactions of nerve-cells in our material brains, than it is possible to create an artificial consciousness. How will we ever know if we'll be able to mimic such emergent miraculousness artificially, without it being infected by our flaws? Will it hate? Will it love? Will it be jealous? Will it be indifferent, or maybe even psychotic? I'll leave you with these questions and the video below which discusses these topics better than I can. It's by YouTuber IdeasOfIceAndFire, who has made a great series discussing all the books, except for the sixth and final one. He also made many videos about Game of Thrones and I can recommend them if you're at all interested in these topics.
Dune Talk: The Butlerian Jihad & The Dangers of Artificial Intelligence
source: Wikipedia
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I 💜 Frank Herbert. He is one of all-time favourite writers. Other than the Dune stuff, The Santaroga Barrier and The Godmakers I also highly, highly recommend.
I can’t remember whether the Mentats also depended on the Spice, or was it just the Bene Gesserit and Guild? There was something that Mentats took regularly, it stained their lips.
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I honestly read only Dune by Frank Herbert, but after this I think I might have to read the ones you suggested too. ;-)
Yeah... that Mentat stuff... what was that again, it was some kind of juice... Sapho juice!!
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I went to look it up after reading your post and realised my copy Dune has disappeared. Maybe I lent it to someone... I don’t know.
I think I might like to go back and read God Emperor of Dune again. I think there’s quite a bit of really good stuff in that book.
It felt like the ‘2nd trilogy’ (God Emperor, Heretics, and Chapter House) was taking a very critical mirror to Imperial Christianity in a way, and comparing it to Pharaonic Egypt. That could also just be my own filters though 😉
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Hello @zyx066, thank you for sharing this creative work! We just stopped by to say that you've been upvoted by the @creativecrypto magazine. The Creative Crypto is all about art on the blockchain and learning from creatives like you. Looking forward to crossing paths again soon. Steem on!
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Interesting article, thanks. Frank Herbert definitely had some interesting insight.
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