Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Johan's avatar

The “makes everyone stupider” line is the right worry aimed at the wrong target. AI does not lower intelligence. It removes the friction that built intelligence in the first place. Learning to write is learning to think, Hayes says, and he is correct, but the mechanism matters. You do not get the thinking from the finished essay. You get it from the struggle of producing it. Outsource the struggle and you keep the output while quietly losing the faculty. The danger is not a dumber person. It is a person who cannot tell the difference, because the results still look fine.

Hayes feels this himself. He draws a clean line between thinking and grunt work, then immediately admits the line might be fake. It is fake, or at least it moves. “What year was this guy born” seems like pure retrieval, until you notice that the act of hunting through your own files is how you stay intimate with your own material. Every offloaded task feels trivial in isolation. The cost is only visible in aggregate, years later, as a capacity that no longer answers when you call it. That is the actual endgame worth a podcast. Not whether the machine can think, but whether we will still bother to.

Johan 🐌

David J. Sharp's avatar

What bothers me is the intent of AI’s tech bros masters: How can we trust them to act humanely vs. financially? The Anthropic mess pits moral v. amoral; and those tech bros prefer profit first.

17 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?