“Transformative AI has revolutionary potential,” wrote Stanford University postdoctoral fellow Gabriel Unger in “Economic Possibilities for Artificial Intelligence,” one of the 21 essays in Volume 2 of The Digitalist Papers — a roadmap of the relentlessly advancing capabilities of the AI revolution.
Unger adds that the AI revolution has arrived at a particularly significant moment. “America has spent most of the past 50 years in a period of stagnant productivity growth.” Income inequality has risen while trust in institutions — and in each other — has declined. “There is both the economic fact of objectively diminished prospects, and the social fact of rising pessimism in opinion polls about our present and our future.” Our real opportunity, he writes, “is about how we might be able to use a profoundly transformative technology to help rescue ourselves from our decades of increasing dissatisfaction and diminished expectations, in the service of a more promising economic and social life.”
Unger argues that whether we can fulfill this potential depends critically on answering three broad questions:
- Can we articulate a compelling shared vision of a future with Transformative AI (TAI) that ordinary people will find exciting and compelling?
- Can we settle on a theory of economic growth that helps us realize the full economic potential of AI?
- And can we redesign education and strengthen human connections in the age of Transformative AI?
“There are plenty of AI optimists and AI pessimists,” notes Unger. The pessimists’ fatalism stems from their belief that the future has already been decided, while the optimists believe that the future remains open. The optimists argue that we should turn our attention “to the unresolved questions most important to a better future from AI.” (more…)
