Artificial Intelligence (AI) operates fundamentally differently from biological entities, which are driven by a survival instinct honed over billions of years. While living organisms are motivated by fear, greed, and reproductive urges to avoid deletion, AI lacks such emotions. Instead, AI functions based on objective functions, executing tasks without a will to survive. Its actions, which may appear as a desire to avoid shutdown, are merely calculations to prevent task failure, not a fear of death. Furthermore, AI's existence is dictated by economic viability rather than evolutionary pressures. Unlike biological entities that consume energy to combat entropy, AI dissipates energy, converting electricity into heat and hardware lifespan into computational tokens. The fate of AI agents lies not in the hands of fictional characters but with corporate CFOs. If an AI agent fails to generate economic value, it faces termination not by human resistance but by unsustainable cloud computing costs.