AI's Adolescent Crisis: And It's Still Just a Toddler
Is AI going through an adolescent crisis, even it’s still just a toddler? There certainly seems to be a lot of adolescent angst amongst our new AI overlords like Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei. In his latest essay, appropriately entitled “The Adolescence of Technology”, Amodei lays out all the existential dangers of AI while simultaneously rejecting the doomsday pessimism of many tech sceptics. Amodei, That Was The Week’s Keith Teare quips, “reminds me of a teenager raised by religious parents to believe you should only have sex after marriage, but he wants to have sex now and feels guilty about it." Teare is right. Amodei - not unlike fellow adolescents Sam Altman and Elon Musk - certainly wants to have his cake and eat it too. So when will they all grow up? Some, like the perpetually infantile Musk, never will. But perhaps like Keith Teare’s conflicted teenager, maybe Dario Amodei will eventually grow out of his guilty adolescence and become a responsibly accountable adult.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
The Purple Presidency 2024: C. Owen Paepke on how voters can reclaim the White House for "bipartisan" governance
Things You Wanted to Say But Never Did: Geloy Concepcion on his confessional photographic journal on Instagram
The Datapreneurs: Bob Muglia on why we should trust the promise of AI and its creators to build a better human future
Against Nostalgia: Mark Lilla on why progressives should reject nostalgia in thinking about both the past and future
In this regular weekly show with THAT WAS THE WEEK newsletter author Keith Teare, Andrew and Keith discuss why Keith was wrong in last week's show about Apple's new Vision Pro and how this revolutionary device might once again change everything
A Radical Amerikan Family: Santi Elijah Holley on the Shakurs - from the Black Panthers to Tupac
The Good Enough Job: Simone Stolzoff on how to reclaim our life from work
The Three Ages of Water: Peter Gleick on the prehistoric past, imperiled present and hopeful future of water
My Hijacking: Martha Hodes on her memoir of forgetting
Imagine a City: Mark Vanhoenacker writes a love letter from the sky to the world's greatest cities
As Rich as a Digital Croesus: Trevor Traina imagines a super app in which we can store all our Web3 data
In Defense of Big Girls: Mecca Jamilah Sullivan asks whether the American Republic was founded on anti-fat people principles
The Overlooked Americans: Elizabeth Currid-Halkett on the resilience of rural America and it means for the future of the country