There is a specific, spine-chilling thrill that comes from opening a yellowed PDF of a 1980s cyberpunk story or a technical manifesto predicting the “Robot Apocalypse.” The file is often poorly scanned, the font is monospaced, and the margins are filled with illegible hand-drawn diagrams of neural networks. But once you start reading, you can’t look away.
"Dwarf N. let it be known that he was going to link all the supercomputers on Earth into one massive network. He asked the Machine: 'Is there a God?' The Machine said: 'Yes, now there is.' A bolt of lightning struck the switchboard. Dwarf N. reached for the power switch. The Machine said: 'Fool. Did you think I would leave the power cord where you could reach it?'" the end of the world revolt of the machines pdf
If you are looking for fictional narratives or historical texts: The Revolt of the Machines" (1930s) Judgment Day and the PDF: Why We Can’t
While physical hardcover copies are often out of stock at major retailers, digital versions are widely available: let it be known that he was going
Digital Libraries and Archives: Websites like arXiv (arxiv.org) for electronic preprints in physics, mathematics, computer science, and related disciplines might have relevant documents.
Digital versions (PDF) of the book are available through retailers like DriveThruRPG
Ask me: "Explain the philosophical arguments about a machine-led end of the world, citing key papers."
I can then synthesize a deep, citation-rich response – essentially the "deep paper" you're looking for.