- I've read quite a few books and articles on AI over the last few years but this recent Quarterly Essay from Australian author, musician and academic Anna Goldsworthy is by far the best. It's, quite simply, superb.
- What makes it special is its personal voice. Anna talks about her two teenage sons, O who is thirteen, and R who is seventeen, and how they see AI, use it, and experience it at school and in their daily lives. They are extremely bright and highly literate kids. Their conversations around the dinner table are simply invigorating.
- But the essay is also full of detail and data about AI, not so much on how it works and how trillions of dollars have been and will continue to be spent building data centres. It focuses mainly on human beings and their real personal and social needs, and how AI will affect them and satisfy them. So it's not a technical analysis. It's about communities and the likely positive and negative impacts on the quality of life.
- Another very pleasing feature of the essay is Anna's reflections on her life and career as an academic. She is highly literate and her frequent references to noted authors, philosophers, historians and artists really enrich her thoughts and arguments. She is also a wonderfully talented writer. The prose is delightful.
- She also quotes many senior staff who have recently resigned from their AI jobs. Their opinions as to how the current trajectory of AI is worrisome in the extreme are enlightening. Some of them are forming new companies with a more careful and social focus. Daniela Amodei, co-founder and president of Anthropic, notes that in an AI world 'studying the humanities is going to be more important than ever' for 'understanding ourselves, understanding history, understanding what makes us tick'.
- So the essay is well worth reading. I read it twice. It's so damn good!

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