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Erik Brynjolfsson’s paper “The Turing Trap: The Promise and Peril of Human-Like Artificial Intelligence” argues that the “imitation game” of creating tech that mimics humans has increased productivity and living standards, but does not exist without costs. Those costs make up “The Turing Trap” which happens when humans not involved in creating AI cannot compete with the productivity and efficiency of the robots designed to do their jobs, and lose control of their economic and political futures.
The Turing Trap sits at the center of contemporary labor force struggles, including the Great Resignation, the fight for “good jobs” and cratering male labor force participation. Michael Strain, who directs AEI’s Economic Policy Studies, joins Dr. Brynjolfsson and I to discuss what economic policy can do to encourage more innovators aim higher and create machines that augment rather than replace human labor, and how that effort is crucial to the American Dream.
Mentioned in the episode
Erik Brynjolfsson
Utopia Paperback by Thomas More
Foundation Mass Market Paperback by Isaac Asimov
Heilbronner’s Worldly Philosophers
Doug Hofstadter
The Turing Trap by Erik Brynjolfsson
Michael R. Strain
The American Dream is Not Dead
The High School Movement
Pigouvian Tax
Consumption Tax
Tax Reform Act of 1986
Greg Mankiw Pigou Club
5
1818 ratings
Erik Brynjolfsson’s paper “The Turing Trap: The Promise and Peril of Human-Like Artificial Intelligence” argues that the “imitation game” of creating tech that mimics humans has increased productivity and living standards, but does not exist without costs. Those costs make up “The Turing Trap” which happens when humans not involved in creating AI cannot compete with the productivity and efficiency of the robots designed to do their jobs, and lose control of their economic and political futures.
The Turing Trap sits at the center of contemporary labor force struggles, including the Great Resignation, the fight for “good jobs” and cratering male labor force participation. Michael Strain, who directs AEI’s Economic Policy Studies, joins Dr. Brynjolfsson and I to discuss what economic policy can do to encourage more innovators aim higher and create machines that augment rather than replace human labor, and how that effort is crucial to the American Dream.
Mentioned in the episode
Erik Brynjolfsson
Utopia Paperback by Thomas More
Foundation Mass Market Paperback by Isaac Asimov
Heilbronner’s Worldly Philosophers
Doug Hofstadter
The Turing Trap by Erik Brynjolfsson
Michael R. Strain
The American Dream is Not Dead
The High School Movement
Pigouvian Tax
Consumption Tax
Tax Reform Act of 1986
Greg Mankiw Pigou Club
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