AI: Standing at the Crossroads
“The rise of artificial intelligence (“AI”) has thrust us into a “civilisational moment”, challenging our conventional frameworks for understanding the world. This crisis reveals itself subtly at first—a growing unease as we recognise that our usual technical, business, and policy tools fall short… We are compelled to revisit these concerns: what does it mean to be human in the midst of artificial intelligence? What does it mean to live a good human life when artificial minds can do what we do, and in some cases much better?”
In this paper, Brendan McCord argues that technologists are increasingly confronted with dilemmas that extend far beyond mere coding, as exemplified by Jack Clark’s caution that staunch AI safety advocates might lean towards authoritarian—and even kinetic—measures, thus reviving the age-old tension between security and freedom. Much like the seismic shifts during the American Founding, the French Revolution, and the scientific upheavals of Copernicus, Darwin, and Einstein, our current era compels us to reconsider what it means to be human when artificial minds can rival, and sometimes surpass, our capabilities. Some see technology as our doom, others as our salvation. Against this stark divide, we turn to the philosophical tradition because it stands outside our moment and its certainties, engaging for centuries with the deepest questions of human existence.
Summary of Research Paper
The Two Dominant Philosophies: As the paper explores in detail, the current AI debate is polarised between:
● Existential Pessimism: This school warns of AI's apocalyptic potential, viewing it as a possible "black ball" technology that could irreversibly upend civilization. In response, it advocates measures from development pauses to bombing data centers, and above all it calls for centralized, transnational governance to control AI development.
● Accelerationism: This counter-movement embraces techno-optimism by treating AI as the next evolutionary leap—a tool to drive unprecedented progress. However, accelerationism risks reducing technology to a new form of secular religion, where market forces and innovation become ends in themselves, potentially marginalising human autonomy.
Human Flourishing at Risk: AI extremism—whether cloaked in fatalistic rationalism or radical accelerationism—threatens what lies at the heart of Western civilization: the freedom to explore different visions of the good life. Much as Soviet Marxism attempted, its adherents propose a reductionism that risks closing the aperture through which our civilization’s rich, self-critical tensions renew themselves. In forsaking the nuanced interplay of reason and moral aspiration, these ideologies undermine the autonomy that has historically driven progress. Instead, we must build AI through deep philosophical thinking about human flourishing—this approach will shape how future technologists develop AI, as HAI Lab at the University of Oxford demonstrates by translating philosophical insights into open-source software.
Reclaiming Western Dynamism: To treat the West as a monoculture would miss this paper’s key insight: it is a dynamic, complex, and ever-evolving order. Its vitality springs from distinct visions of the good life—from the heroic ideals of ancient Bronze Age civilizations, to the Greek philosophical tradition of reason and science, to the Biblical emphasis on family and pious devotion. Western liberalism emerged from these creative tensions and thrives because it discovers their primary overlapping agreement: these diverse sources each affirm the individual's sovereignty in pursuing excellence.
A Path Forward: This paper argues for developing AI—which the author calls 'the tool of tools'—in a way that enhances human autonomy while resisting centralized control. His framework examines how humans use habits, tools, and cognitive offloading to organize life and advance civilization, while warning that these same elements can blind us to alternatives and foster dangerous dependencies. The path forward requires creating AI systems that enhance human reason and enable access to diverse, competing viewpoints, while cultivating a new generation of philosopher-builders who can shape technology in service of human flourishing. By rejecting both heavy-handed regulation and unfettered AI acceleration, we can transform AI from a challenge to the West into a catalyst for its highest aspirations.