This week, Daniel) chats about technology, governance and culture with Samuel Hammond), senior economist for the Foundation for American Innovation), a think tank focused on bridging the cultures of Silicon Valley and DC. Additionally, Sam has an outstanding substack where he writes about topics surrounding AI development & regulation, as well as the history and future of liberalism, secularism and pluralism.
Topics include:
- The day-to-day of working in a think tank
- What it means to bridge the cultural divide between Silicon Valley and DC
- The real American power centers (New York (finance/media), Texas (energy), Silicon Valley (tech) and how Hollywood has always been subservient
- What it means to embrace pluralism in terms of values, morals and ontological frameworks, and the benefits of such beliefs
- How to apply the theory of The Second Best to ones general worldview: “when it is infeasible to remove a particular market distortion, introducing one or more additional market distortions may lead to a more efficient outcome”
- The evolution of liberalism has evolved as a response to periods of extreme conflict (The 30 Years War, for instance)
- Debating whether or not crisis is essential for generating new equilibria in society
- Accelerationism and capitalism as a general intelligence
- Path dependency and historical development
- Exploring scenarios about what happens if AI scaling laws breakdown
- Predictions about AI’s impact on regime change and the rise of AI-native institutions
- Can open source AI keep up? Why it’s important that they keep trying, despite the widening performance gap
- Why Sam isn’t worried about children adapting to technological change
- The coming return of Neo-Medieval societal structures
- Completing the system of Canadian Idealism
Artwork: Edward Hicks, “Peaceable Kingdom”, 1844-1846