
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


There is no shortage of technologists touting the promise of AI, but the frontier of AI fervor is a noted philosopher who thinks the economy could double every few months—and that space colonization by self-replicating machines may not be hundreds of years away.
Enter Nick Bostrom, who previously authored the 2014 bestseller Superintelligence about the dangers of AI, and now considers what can go right with AI in his new book Deep Utopia. Bostrom was formerly a professor at Oxford University, and currently principal researcher of the Macrostrategy Research Initiative.
In this episode, he joins Philipp Carlsson-Szlezak, Chief Economist of BCG, who is skeptical of AI narratives and thinks technology’s economic impact has long-lagged expectations. They discuss different takes on the likely size and speed of AI’s impact on the macroeconomy, and why they disagree about the prospect of tech-driven mass unemployment. Bostrom also explains key themes from Deep Utopia, including stages of utopia, “shallow and deep” redundancy, implications for policy, as well as the unique rhetorical style of the book.
Key topics discussed:
01:45 | Is tech jumping ahead or behind schedule?
03:24 | Is Deep Utopia really a book about AI or about philosophy?
04:39 | Technological unemployment: Real or fallacious
10:54 | Taxonomy of utopia
13:59 | What about public policy, such as UBI?
15:47 | Concept of shallow and deep redundancy
18:50 | Concept of “interestingness”
21:07 | Rhetorical style of book
23:29 | AI regulation and policy
Additional inspirations from Nick Bostrom:
By BCG Henderson Institute4.7
3434 ratings
There is no shortage of technologists touting the promise of AI, but the frontier of AI fervor is a noted philosopher who thinks the economy could double every few months—and that space colonization by self-replicating machines may not be hundreds of years away.
Enter Nick Bostrom, who previously authored the 2014 bestseller Superintelligence about the dangers of AI, and now considers what can go right with AI in his new book Deep Utopia. Bostrom was formerly a professor at Oxford University, and currently principal researcher of the Macrostrategy Research Initiative.
In this episode, he joins Philipp Carlsson-Szlezak, Chief Economist of BCG, who is skeptical of AI narratives and thinks technology’s economic impact has long-lagged expectations. They discuss different takes on the likely size and speed of AI’s impact on the macroeconomy, and why they disagree about the prospect of tech-driven mass unemployment. Bostrom also explains key themes from Deep Utopia, including stages of utopia, “shallow and deep” redundancy, implications for policy, as well as the unique rhetorical style of the book.
Key topics discussed:
01:45 | Is tech jumping ahead or behind schedule?
03:24 | Is Deep Utopia really a book about AI or about philosophy?
04:39 | Technological unemployment: Real or fallacious
10:54 | Taxonomy of utopia
13:59 | What about public policy, such as UBI?
15:47 | Concept of shallow and deep redundancy
18:50 | Concept of “interestingness”
21:07 | Rhetorical style of book
23:29 | AI regulation and policy
Additional inspirations from Nick Bostrom:

4,225 Listeners

2,175 Listeners

386 Listeners

1,993 Listeners

1,105 Listeners

154 Listeners

197 Listeners

616 Listeners

3,992 Listeners

176 Listeners

108 Listeners

221 Listeners

79 Listeners

170 Listeners

146 Listeners