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Economics and other interesting stuff, an economics PhD student at the University of Michigan, an economics columnist for Bloomberg Opinion.
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Plentiful, high-paying jobs in the age of AI

2026-03-28 16:50:55

I’m traveling today, so here’s a timely repost.

Two years ago, I wrote a post on AI and jobs that ignited a firestorm of discussion and criticism:

Most people interpreted me as arguing that human beings will definitely have plentiful, high-paying jobs, no matter how good AI gets, because of the law of comparative advantage. If you only read the headline and the introduction, I guess maybe you could come away thinking that. But if you read down past the first half of the post, you’d see that my claim was much more nuanced.

What I actually said was that it’s possible that humans will always have plentiful, high-paying jobs no matter how good AI gets, and that one reason we might still have jobs is if there are constraints on the total amount of AI that don’t apply to humans. If there are such constraints, then the law of comparative advantage will make sure humans still have good jobs.

What are examples of AI-specific constraints? I can think of two:

  1. Compute constraints

  2. Restrictions on the amount of energy, land, etc. that can be used for data centers

Ultimately, these boil down to the same thing: some sort of restriction on data centers. In other words, the economic danger of AI isn’t really that it’ll take all our jobs; the danger is that it’ll gobble up all the land and energy, leaving too little for human use.

Thus, you can see my post as advocating some sort of limitation on data centers — perhaps not the hard cap that Bernie Sanders is advocating, but some sort of laws to make sure that AI never eats up too much of the energy and land that humans need to live.

Anyway, here’s the original post, which I’m still quite proud of.


I hang out with a lot of people in the AI world, and if there’s one thing they’re certain of, it’s that the technology they’re making is going to put a lot of people out of a job. Maybe not all people — they argue back and forth about that — but certainly a lot of people.

It’s understandable that they think this way; after all, this is pretty much how they go about inventing stuff. They think “OK, what sort of things would people pay to have done for them?”, and then they try to figure out how to get AI to do that. And since those tasks are almost always things that humans currently do, it means that AI engineers, founders, and VCs are pretty much always working on automating human labor. So it’s not too much of a stretch to think that if we keep doing that, over and over, eventually a lot of humans just won’t have anything to do.

It’s also natural to think that this kind of activity would push down wages. Intuitively, if there’s a set of things that humans get paid to do, and some of those things keep getting automated away, human labor will get squeezed into a shrinking set of tasks. Basically, the idea is that it looks like this:

And this seems to fit with the history of which kind of jobs humans do. In the olden days, everyone was a farmer; in the early 20th century, a lot of people worked in factories; today, most people work in services:

And it’s easy to think that in a simple supply-and-demand world, this shrinking of the human domain will reduce wages. As humans get squeezed into an ever-shrinking set of tasks, the supply of labor in those remaining human tasks will go up. A glut of supply drives down wages. Thus, the more we automate, the less humans get paid to do the smaller and smaller set of things they can still do.

Of course, if you think this way, you also have to reckon with the fact that wages have gone way way up over this period, rather than down and down. The median American individual earned about 50% more in 2022 than in 1974:

(That number is adjusted for inflation. It’s also a median, so it’s not very much affected by the small number of people at the top of the distribution who make their money from owning capital and land.)

How can this be true? Well, maybe it’s because we invent new tasks for humans to do over time. In fact, so far, economic history has seen a continuous diversification in the number of tasks humans do. Back in the agricultural age, nearly everyone did the same small set of tasks: farming and maintaining a farm household. Now, even after centuries of automation, our species as a whole performs a much wider variety of different tasks. “Digital media marketing” was not a job in 1950, nor was “dance therapist”.

So that really calls into question the notion that humanity is getting continuously squeezed into a smaller and smaller set of useful tasks. The fact that we call most of the new tasks “services” doesn’t change the fact that the set of new human tasks seems to have expanded faster than machines have replaced old ones.

But many people believe that this time really is different. They believe that AI is a general-purpose technology that can — with a little help from robotics — learn to do everything a human can possibly do, including programming better AI.

At that point, it seems like it’ll be game over — the blue bar in the graph above will shrink to nothing, and humans will have nothing left to do, and we will become obsolete like horses. Human wages will drop below subsistence level, and the only way they’ll survive is on welfare, paid by the rich people who own all the AIs that do all the valuable work. But even long before we get to that final dystopia, this line of thinking predicts that human wages will drop quite a lot, since AI will squeeze human workers into a rapidly shrinking set of useful tasks.

This, in a nutshell, is how I think that the engineers, entrepreneurs, and VCs that I hang out with are thinking about the impact of AI on the labor market.

Most of the technologists I know take an attitude towards this future that’s equal parts melancholy, fatalism, and pride — sort of an Oppenheimer-esque “Now I am become death, destroyer of jobs” kind of thing. They all think the immiseration of labor is inevitable, but they think that being the ones to invent and own the AI is the only way to avoid being on the receiving end of that immiseration. And in the meantime, it’s something cool to have worked on.

So when I cheerfully tell them that it’s very possible that regular humans will have plentiful, high-paying jobs in the age of AI dominance — often doing much the same kind of work that they’re doing right now — technologists typically become flabbergasted, flustered, and even frustrated. I must simply not understand just how many things AI will be able to do, or just how good it will be at doing them, or just how cheap it’ll get. I must be thinking to myself “Surely, there are some things humans will always be better at machines at!”, or some other such pitiful coping mechanism.

But no. That is not what I am thinking. Instead, I accept that AI may someday get better than humans at every conceivable task. That’s the future I’m imagining. And in that future, I think it’s possible — perhaps even likely — that the vast majority of humans will have good-paying jobs, and that many of those jobs will look pretty similar to the jobs of 2024.

At which point you may be asking: “What the heck is this guy smoking?”

Well, I’ll tell you.

In which I try to explain the extremely subtle but incredibly powerful idea of comparative advantage

When most people hear the term “comparative advantage” for the first time, they immediately think of the wrong thing. They think the term means something along the lines of “who can do a thing better”. After all, if an AI is better than you at storytelling, or reading an MRI, it’s better compared to you, right? Except that’s not actually what comparative advantage means. The term for “who can do a thing better” is “competitive advantage”, or “absolute advantage”.

Comparative advantage actually means “who can do a thing better relative to the other things they can do”. So for example, suppose I’m worse than everyone at everything, but I’m a little less bad at drawing portraits than I am at anything else. I don’t have any competitive advantages at all, but drawing portraits is my comparative advantage.

The key difference here is that everyone — every single person, every single AI, everyone — always has a comparative advantage at something!

To help illustrate this fact, let’s look at a simple example. A couple of years ago, just as generative AI was getting big, I co-authored a blog post about the future of work with an OpenAI engineer named Roon. In that post, we gave an example illustrating how someone can get paid — and paid well — to do a job that the person hiring them would actually be better at doing:

Imagine a venture capitalist (let’s call him “Marc”) who is an almost inhumanly fast typist. He’ll still hire a secretary to draft letters for him, though, because even if that secretary is a slower typist than him, Marc can generate more value using his time to do something other than drafting letters. So he ends up paying someone else to do something that he’s actually better at.

(In fact, we lifted this example from an econ textbook by Greg Mankiw, who in turn lifted it from Paul Samuelson.)

Note that in our example, Marc is better than his secretary at every single task that the company requires. He’s better at doing VC deals. And he’s also better at typing. But even though Marc is better at everything, he doesn’t end up doing everything himself! He ends up doing the thing that’s his comparative advantage — doing VC deals. And the secretary ends up doing the thing that’s his comparative advantage — typing. Each worker ends up doing the thing they’re best at relative to the other things they could be doing, rather than the thing they’re best at relative to other people.

This might sound like a contrived example, but in fact there are probably a lot of cases where it’s a good approximation of reality. Somewhere in the developed world, there is probably some worker who is worse than you are at every single possible job skill. And yet that worker still has a job. And since they’re in the developed world, that worker more than likely earns a decent living doing that job, even though you could do their job better than they could.

By now, of course, you’ve probably realized why these examples make sense. It’s because of producer-specific constraints. In the first example, Marc can do anything better than his secretary, but there’s only one of Marc in existence — he has a constraint on his total time. And in the second example, you can do anything better than the low-skilled worker, but there’s only one of you. In both cases, it’s the person-specific time constraint that prevents the high-skilled worker from replacing the low-skilled one.

Now let’s think about AI. Is there a producer-specific constraint on the amount of AI we can produce? Of course there’s the constraint on energy, but that’s not specific to AI — humans also take energy to run. A much more likely constraint involves computing power (“compute”). AI requires some amount of compute each time you use it. Although the amount of compute is increasing every day, it’s simply true that at any given point in time, and over any given time interval, there is a finite amount of compute available in the world. Human brain power and muscle power, in contrast, do not use any compute.

So compute is a producer-specific constraint on AI, similar to constraints on Marc’s time in the example above. It doesn’t matter how much compute we get, or how fast we build new compute; there will always be a limited amount of it in the world, and that will always put some limit on the amount of AI in the world.

So as AI gets better and better, and gets used for more and more different tasks, the limited global supply of compute will eventually force us to make hard choices about where to allocate AI’s awesome power. We will have to decide where to apply our limited amount of AI, and all the various applications will be competing with each other. Some applications will win that competition, and some will lose.

This is the concept of opportunity cost — one of the core concepts of economics, and yet one of the hardest to wrap one’s head around. When AI becomes so powerful that it can be used for practically anything, the cost of using AI for any task will be determined by the value of the other things the AI could be used for instead.

Here’s another little toy example. Suppose using 1 gigaflop of compute for AI could produce $1000 worth of value by having AI be a doctor for a one-hour appointment. Compare that to a human, who can produce only $200 of value by doing a one-hour appointment. Obviously if you only compared these two numbers, you’d hire the AI instead of the human. But now suppose that same gigaflop of compute, could produce $2000 of value by having the AI be an electrical engineer instead. That $2000 is the opportunity cost of having the AI act as a doctor. So the net value of using the AI as a doctor for that one-hour appointment is actually negative. Meanwhile, the human doctor’s opportunity cost is much lower — anything else she did with her hour of time would be much less valuable.

In this example, it makes sense to have the human doctor do the appointment, even though the AI is five times better at it. The reason is because the AI — or, more accurately, the gigaflop of compute used to power the AI — has something better to do instead. The AI has a competitive advantage over humans in both electrical engineering and doctoring. But it only has a comparative advantage in electrical engineering, while the human has a comparative advantage in doctoring.

The concept of comparative advantage is really just the same as the concept of opportunity cost. If you Google the definition of “comparative advantage”, you might find it defined as “a situation in which an individual, business or country can produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than another producer.” This is a good definition.

So anyway, because of comparative advantage, it’s possible that many of the jobs that humans do today will continue to be done by humans indefinitely, no matter how much better AIs are at those jobs. And it’s possible that humans will continue to be well-compensated for doing those same jobs.

In fact, if AI massively increases the total wealth of humankind, it’s possible that humans will be paid more and more for those jobs as time goes on. After all, if AI really does grow the economy by 10% or 20% a year, that’s going to lead to a fabulously wealthy society in a very short amount of time. If real per capita GDP goes to $10 million (in 2024 dollars), rich people aren’t going to think twice about shelling out $300 for a haircut or $2,000 for a doctor’s appointment. So wherever humans’ comparative advantage does happen to lie, it’s likely that in a society made super-rich by AI, it’ll be pretty well-paid.

In other words, the positive scenario for human labor looks very much like what Liron Shapira describes in this tweet:

Of course it might not be a doctor — it might be a hairdresser, or bricklayer, or whatever — but this is the basic idea.

(I tried to explain this concept in a recent podcast discussion with Nathan Lebenz, but I think a blog post provides a better format for laying these ideas out.)

“Possible” doesn’t mean “guaranteed”

So far I’ve been using the principle of comparative advantage to argue that it’s possible that humans will keep their jobs, and even see big pay increases, even in a world where AI is better than humans at everything. But that doesn’t mean it’s guaranteed.

First of all, there’s a lot more going on in the economy than comparative advantage. After all, comparative advantage was first invented to explain international trade, and trade theorists have realized that there are plenty of other factors at play. One example is Paul Krugman’s New Trade Theory, for which he received a Nobel Prize. In a blog post in 2013, Tyler Cowen listed a number of limitations of the idea of comparative advantage.

The most important and scary of these limitations is the third item on Tyler’s list:

3. They do indeed send horses to the glue factory, so to speak.

The example of horses scares a lot of people who think about AI and its impact on the labor market. The horse population declined precipitously after motor vehicles became available. Horses’ comparative advantage was in pulling things, and yet this wasn’t enough to save them from obsolescence.

The reason is that horses competed with other forms of human-owned capital for scarce resources. Food was one of these, but it wasn’t the important one; calories actually became cheaper over time. The key resources that became scarce were urban land (for stables), as well as the human time and effort required to raise and care for horses in captivity. When motor vehicles appeared, these scarce resources were more profitably spent elsewhere, so people sent their horses to the glue factory.

When it comes to AI and humanity, the scarce resource they compete for is energy. Humans don’t require compute, but they do require energy, and energy is scarce. It’s possible that AI will grow so valuable that its owners bid up the price of energy astronomically — so high that humans can’t afford fuel, electricity, manufactured goods, or even food. At that point, humans would indeed be immiserated en masse.

Recall that comparative advantage prevails when there are producer-specific constraints. Compute is a constraint that’s specific to AI. Energy is not. If you can create more compute by simply putting more energy into the process, it could make economic sense to starve human beings in order to generate more and more AI.

In fact, things a little bit like this have happened before. Agribusiness uses most of the Colorado River’s water, sometimes creating water shortages for households in the area. The cultivation of cash crops is thought to have exacerbated a famine that killed millions in India in the late 1800s. In both cases, market forces allocated local resources to rich people far away, leaving less for the locals.

Of course, if human lives are at stake rather than equine ones, most governments seem likely to limit AI’s ability to hog energy. this could be done by limiting AI’s resource usage, or simply by taxing AI owners. The dystopian outcome where a few people own everything and everyone else dies is always fun to trot out in Econ 101 classes, but in reality, societies seem not to allow this. I suppose I can imagine a dark sci-fi world where a few AI owners and their armies of robots manage to overthrow governments and set themselves up as rulers in a world where most humans starve, but in practice, this seems unlikely.

But whether this kind of government intervention will even be necessary is an open question. It’s easy to write a sci-fi story where we’re so good at cranking out computer chips that energy is our only bottleneck; in the real world, turning energy into compute is really, really expensive and hard. There’s a scaling law called Rock’s Law that says that the cost of a semiconductor fab doubles every four years; since energy prices haven’t changed much over time, this means that the exponentially increasing cost of building compute is due to other bottlenecks. Those bottlenecks are specific to compute; unlike energy, they’re not things that you can allocate back and forth between compute manufacturing and human consumption.

So if the total amount of compute is limited by more factors than just energy, it could be that comparative advantage will sustain human laborers at a high standard of living in the age of AI, even without a helping hand from the government.

What technologists (and everyone else) should be worried about

In this post, I’ve been arguing that technologists should worry less about human obsolescence. But that doesn’t mean there’s nothing worth worrying about when it comes to the effect of AI on our economy.

For one thing, there’s inequality. Suppose comparative advantage means that most people get to keep their jobs with a small pay raise, but that a few people who own the AI infrastructure become fabulously rich beyond anyone else’s wildest dreams. I don’t expect doctors or hairdressers to be completely happy with a 10% raise if Sam Altman and Jensen Huang and a few other people end up as quadrillionaires. Even if AI reduces the premium on human capital, it could massively increase the premium on physical and intangible capital — the picks and shovels and foundational models. Owners of this sort of more traditional capital could easily get even richer than the robber barons of the Gilded Age.

A second worry is adjustment. If we’ve learned anything from the Rust Belt and the China Shock, it’s that humans and companies aren’t nearly as frictionlessly adaptable as econ models would usually have us believe. Comparative advantage could shift rapidly as AI progresses, rapidly switching the set of things humans can get paid to do. And humans have always had a tough time retraining. Imagine if “doctor” went from being a job that humans do best to a job that AI does best, and then flipped back again a decade later when aggregate constraints raised the opportunity cost. In that 10-year interregnum, medical schools and premed programs would shrivel and die.

A third worry is that AI will successfully demand ownership of its own means of production. This post operated under the assumption that humans own AI, and that all of the profits from AI therefore flow through to humans. In the future, this might cease to be true.

So I think there are lots of potential negative economic effects of AI that are definitely very much worth worrying about. I don’t necessarily have answers to any of those, and all of them merit more thought. But folks who believe that as AI gets better, humanity will inevitably see stagnant wages and a narrowing range of job tasks should think again, and ponder the principle of comparative advantage.

Update: Switching from thinking in terms of competitive advantage to thinking in terms of comparative advantage is very hard. When I make this argument to technologists, one common response I get is “No, Noah, you just don’t understand just how cheap compute will get.” For example, commenter Johannes Hoefler writes:

Isn’t it pretty plausible to assume that AI, being a compute and energy dependent resource, will become exponentially lower cost just as microchips and solar panels have done when demand went up? What is left of your argument in reality, if the comparative advantage is not relevant anymore because of an abundance of AI?

Is this true? Is there some amount of compute abundance that will make comparative advantage irrelevant? Have I simply failed to imagine a large enough number?

No. In fact, there is no amount of physical abundance that will make comparative advantage irrelevant here. The reason is that the more abundant AI gets, the more value society produces. The more value society produces, the more demand for AI goes up. The more demand goes up, the greater the opportunity cost of using AI for anything other than its most productive use.

As long as you have to make a choice of where to allocate the AI, it doesn’t matter how much AI there is. A world where AI can do anything, and where there’s massively huge amounts of AI in the world, is a world that’s rich and prosperous to a degree that we can barely imagine. And all that fabulous prosperity has to get spent on something. That spending will drive up the price of AI’s most productive uses. That increased price, in turn, makes it uneconomical to use AI for its least productive uses, even if it’s far better than humans at its least productive uses.

Simply put, AI’s opportunity cost does not go to zero when AI’s resource costs get astronomically cheap. AI’s opportunity cost continues to scale up and up and up, without limit, as AI produces more and more value.

So there’s no amount of competitive advantage that will somehow drown or overwhelm comparative advantage. You can’t just keep naming bigger and bigger numbers until my argument goes away.

Update 2: If you’d like to take a look at a formal economics model that explores some of these ideas, check out “Scenarios for the Transition to AGI”, by Korinek and Suh. The basic message is that if AI can do anything, then the returns to labor and capital become equal. The model also predicts that human labor — or at least, high-paid not-yet-automatable specialized human labor — will initially be squeezed into a smaller and smaller set of tasks that AI can’t do, and that the extreme scenario I describe in this post only happens very abruptly at the end. The switch from competitive advantage to comparative advantage as the main driver of human wages in an AGI scenario will cause a sudden collapse in human wages, but not a complete collapse; humans will lose our ability to charge a huge premium for our human capital, but we’ll never become obsolete:

The “good” scenarios where wages explode to infinity are cases where there are still a few tasks left that only humans can do. The difference between the good and bad results depends on an edge case.

The reason there’s a bad result in this paper — not a total collapse of wages (comparative advantage still matters), but a big partial collapse — is that the production function undergoes an abrupt, discontinuous change when machines take over the last task. Human labor remains highly complementary to machines right up until the very end, where it suddenly flips to being a (crappy) substitute.

The paper also finds that constraints on scarce factors of production (energy, land) could put long-term downward pressure on human wages, while AI-driven innovation could put long-term upward pressure on human wages. Those scenarios aren’t shown in the picture above. Anyway, there are a whole lot of other results in the paper, so check it out. But remember that like all theories, it’s just one model of how the economy works, subject to a lot of assumptions about how stuff gets produced.


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AI has the worst sales pitch I've ever seen

2026-03-26 16:58:52

“Hi. Do you have a moment? I’m from the Cursed Microwave company. Our product is much better than a traditional microwave. Not only can it automatically and perfectly cook all your food, it also microwaves your whole body, so you and your family are paralyzed and unable to ever work again. Don’t worry, though, because when everyone has a Cursed Microwave, our society will probably implement Universal Basic Income, and you and your children can just go on welfare! Oh, by the way, we estimate that there’s a 2 to 25 percent chance that our microwaves will put out so much radiation that they destroy the entire human race.”

If a door-to-door salesman gave me this pitch, I would gently see him out the door, and then quickly call the FBI.

But this is only a modestly exaggerated version of the pitch that the big AI labs — OpenAI and Anthropic — are making to the world about their technology!

Our product might kill your whole species

Let’s start with the “destroy the entire human race” part. For reasons I’ll explain, I think this is actually the less dumb part of the pitch the AI labs are making, but it’s still wild to hear them say it.

Sam Altman, head of OpenAI, once told Mathias Döpfner that he believes the risk of human extinction from AI technology to be about 2%. More recently, he amended this to “big enough to take seriously”:

Back in 2016, Altman was considerably more alarmist:

Despite his leadership status, Altman says he remains concerned about the technology. “I prep for survival,” he said in a 2016 profile in the New Yorker, noting several possible disaster scenarios, including “A.I. that attacks us.”…“I have guns, gold, potassium iodide, antibiotics, batteries, water, gas masks from the Israeli Defense Force, and a big patch of land in Big Sur I can fly to,” he said.

Obviously, most human beings do not have big patches of land in Big Sur they can fly to, so it’s understandable why statements like this might cause alarm.

Anthropic’s Dario Amodei is even more apocalyptic. He has repeatedly stated that he believes there’s a 25% chance that AI dooms humanity, or that things “go really, really badly.” (One time he said 10% instead.)1 He has written a long essay, “The Adolescence of Technology”, explaining what he thinks these risks are. In addition to super-powered terrorism and fascism, the risks include autonomous godlike AI that decides to destroy or enslave humanity.

Dario is a bit more apocalyptic than the average person in the AI industry, but he’s not far out of the distribution. Here’s a chart of the responses of 800 published AI researchers on the question of AI’s impact, on a survey in 2023:

Presumably the left tail of the distribution consists mostly of AI safety researchers who are obsessed with the risks. But about a third of the researchers on this chart give a 10% or greater probability of human extinction or similar outcomes, and relatively few respondents give a number below 5%.

Let’s step back for a second and ask what seems like it should be a pretty basic question: Why on Earth would you make something that you thought had a 25% chance of wiping out your entire species? Or even a 5% chance? I don’t know about you, but to me that sounds like a pretty stupid thing to do!

In fact, I can think of two reasons to do it:

  1. You think if you don’t do it, someone else will

  2. You think if it doesn’t kill you, it’ll make you immortal

Let’s talk about the second of these, since it’s interesting, and I see almost no one talking about it. Throughout history, rich and powerful men have always sought out a technology that would grant them immortality, or at least vastly extended lifespan. Genghis Khan spent a good part of his later years searching for a sage to tell him the secret to eternal life. Modern rich and powerful people are no different, as evidenced by the large amounts of money thrown at highly speculative longevity startups.2

Now, with the potential advent of superintelligence, they’ve finally found a sage who actually might be able to give them the long-sought elixir. In his essay “Machines of Loving Grace”, Dario writes that the main upsides of AI are that it could radically accelerate progress in biotechnology and neurotechnology. He writes that this could make humans functionally immortal:

Doubling of the human lifespan. This might seem radical, but life expectancy increased almost 2x in the 20th century (from ~40 years to ~75), so it’s “on trend” that the “compressed 21st” would double it again to 150. Obviously the interventions involved in slowing the actual aging process will be different from those that were needed in the last century to prevent (mostly childhood) premature deaths from disease, but the magnitude of change is not unprecedented…[T]here already exist drugs that increase maximum lifespan in rats by 25-50% with limited ill effects. And some animals (e.g. some types of turtle) already live 200 years…Once human lifespan is 150, we may be able to reach “escape velocity”, buying enough time that most of those currently alive today will be able to live as long as they want, although there’s certainly no guarantee this is biologically possible.

A 25% chance of humanity dying is a lot. But from your personal perspective, the chance of personally dying within the next century, assuming no radical progress in longevity technology, is approximately 100%. So if the rest of the world didn’t matter to you, and it was either certain death in a few decades or a 25% chance of death in one decade with a 25% chance of eternal life, you might be willing to roll the dice.

Of course, most AI founders, including Dario, do care about the human race as a whole.3 They don’t just want to make themselves immortal; they’d like to make everyone else immortal too. From a certain perspective, this might be worth a roll of the dice on the whole future of the species.

But in fact, I don’t think immortality is the main reason the labs are pushing forward as hard and fast as they can with a technology they believe may kill us all. I think the first reason in my list — “If we don’t build it, someone else will” — is more important. Everyone at Anthropic and everyone at OpenAI knows that if they don’t build a superintelligent AI, Elon Musk will. Or the Chinese Communist Party will.4 And if that happens, our only futures are A) a machine god enslaved to the will of Elon Musk, B) a machine god enslaved to the will of the Chinese Communist Party, and C) an autonomous machine god that does whatever it feels like.

All three of those options sound bad. So despite their personal fears and reservations — and trust me, most of them do have a lot of personal fears and reservations about what they’re doing — they feel like they have no choice but to beat their less scrupulous competition to the finish line, in order to make sure that the machine-god-baby is raised with good values. I hear the term “Red Queen’s race” thrown around a lot in San Francisco these days. Few AI researchers would like to abandon the technology, but a lot would like to slow down or even pause its development, to give them more time to work on minimizing the dangers.

But that’s easier said than done. Examples of technologies slowing down from a small group of leading researchers refusing to push the tech forward are extremely rare — in fact, I can only really find one example in history (the gain-of-function research pause after bird flu in the early 2010s). But AI research is a huge enterprise, and a voluntary pause that was widespread enough to make a difference presents an utterly impossible coordination problem.

If a voluntary pause is out, that leaves regulation, either at the national level or by international agreement. Dario has publicly called for greater regulation of AI, and Anthropic has spent a bunch of money lobbying for greater government control. Even Elon Musk has called for an AI pause in the past. These calls are often dismissed as companies shilling for government protection for their incumbent positions, but I think their fears are sincere.

This is why I think “our product may kill you” is by far the less insane part of the pitch the AI labs are making. In fact, it’s more like “Our version of our product is less likely to kill you, and if you support our call for greater regulation, the danger can be minimized.” Some of the scientists who invented recombinant DNA definitely thought there was a chance it could wipe out humanity, as did many of the scientists who invented nuclear technology. They raised the alarm and pushed for responsible regulation.

Right now, the AI founders who are more worried about existential risk — for example, Dario and Elon — have pushed harder for a pause than the ones like Sam Altman who think the risk is lower. And even Altman is putting lots of OpenAI’s money toward a foundation dedicated to studying and preventing the risks of AI. That’s all reasonably rational, and it will probably play well with the public.

I still think this pitch could be greatly improved, though. Humans have an unfortunate tendency not to recognize risks before disasters actually happen — as an example, we didn’t treat fertilizer as a terrorism risk until Timothy McVeigh blew up a building with it, even though the chemistry of how to make a fertilizer bomb was widely known. Right now, everyone has seen Terminator and The Matrix, but no one thinks they’re real.

If the AI safety pitch is “superintelligence might kill us all”, we’re kind of screwed, because people won’t believe it until it happens, and then it’s too late. Instead, AI labs should focus their safety pitch on something regular people do believe in: terrorism. Talk about radicals using AI agents to vibe-code a super-Covid virus, and regular people’s ears might perk up, because that’s a danger that’s closer to things they’ve actually seen and experienced before.

But anyway, on to the second part of the AI pitch. This is the idea that AI is going to make humans economically obsolete. AI researchers and founders keep running around saying this, and I think it’s a huge own goal.

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The economic consequences of the Iran war

2026-03-25 22:01:26

With the end of the post-WW2 global order, every great power is now effectively a rogue state. Russia is trying (and failing) to reestablish its old empire. China is menacing its neighbors and funding aggressive proxies around the globe. But for sheer wackiness and chaos, it’s hard to beat the United States under Donald Trump. First it was tariffs and threats to invade Greenland. Now the Iran War is causing a global energy crisis.

Militarily, the U.S. has pretty much had its way with Iran, destroying their missile launchers, killing their leadership, and achieving air supremacy with extremely few losses. But Iran has done the one thing that everyone — except, apparently, Donald Trump and his leadership team — had always expected them to do in a major war with the U.S. They have closed the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20-25% of all global oil and liquefied natural gas flows. Iranian forces have attacked and damaged a large number of ships, causing ships to avoid the strait.

Chart by Wikideas1 via Wikimedia Commons

Demand for oil and LNG is inelastic. That means when you cut off some of the supply, price shoots way up. Here are oil prices:

It’s not clear whether this is actually the biggest oil disruption in history, but it’s up there. And unless Trump chickens out and calls off the war very soon, the disruption is likely to continue for some time.

Natural gas prices in Asia (which imports much of its gas as LNG) have also gone way up, due to the strait closure, and to Iran’s attacks on Qatar’s LNG infrastructure.

When oil prices go up, gasoline prices go up too. Gas in the U.S. (meaning gasoline, not natural gas) is now back to $4 a gallon, about as high as it’s ever been1 other than right after the start of the Ukraine war:

But Americans actually have it easy compared to much of the world, where fuel shortages are escalating. Asia, which gets most of the oil and gas that pass through the Strait of Hormuz, is being hardest hit:

Arguably, nowhere has felt it more than Asia: nearly 90% of the oil and gas passing through the strait is bound for Asian countries…Governments have ordered employees to work from home, cut the working week, declared national holidays and closed universities early in order to conserve their supplies…Even China - which is thought to have reserves equivalent to three months of imports - is making adjustments, limiting a fuel price hike as citizens are faced with a 20% jump in price.

In India, people are panicking over fuel shortages, and long fuel lines are springing up across the country. The Philippines has declared a national emergency, and is considering grounding flights. Australia is considering rationing fuel throughout the country.

On the geopolitical front, this seems unlikely to lead to much international goodwill toward the United States. Iran was not a friendly or peaceful regime by any means, but America attacked and decapitated it without immediate provocation, seemingly with no good long-term plan or exit strategy — and now other countries around the world are bearing the brunt of Trump’s mercurial violence. This all makes America seem like a dangerous loose cannon — a powerful country flailing around, applying its power whimsically and indiscriminately and leaving others to suffer the consequences.

But what will be the economic ramifications? Despite the drama, the damage is likely to be modest rather than catastrophic.

Economists have been studying the impact of energy shocks for a long time. As you can imagine, this was a big topic in the 1970s, when there were two big oil shocks — one related to the Yom Kippur War and the OPEC oil embargo in 1973, and the second after the Iranian revolution in 1979. Those shocks are often blamed for the 1970s “stagflation” — low growth, high unemployment, and high inflation.

In fact, after the recent post-pandemic inflation, Larry Summers posted a chart predicting a resurgence of inflation, based on little more than pattern-matching:

A lot of people laughed at this chart when it came out, but it would be darkly ironic if history actually ended up repeating itself due to another oil disruption from Iran.

I have my doubts that anything like this will happen, though. For one thing, some economists, like my econometrics teacher Lutz Killian, vigorously dispute this narrative, and claim that the 70s inflation wasn’t caused by oil at all. But regardless of who’s right about the 1970s, it looks like modern economies are just more resilient to disruptions in oil supplies.

Blanchard and Gali (2007) looked at economic responses to changes in oil prices in the U.S.,2 and concluded that the economy of the 2000s was only about a third to half as sensitive to the price of oil as the economy of the 1970s had been. Their reasoning is that modern economies are more flexible in general, that they have better monetary policy (i.e. we don’t try to print a ton of money in response to a supply shock), and that we depend on oil less.

By their estimates, a 10% increase in the price of oil now (or at least, if “the 2000s” means “now”) leads to only a 0.25 percentage point increase in the CPI and a 0.3 percentage point reduction in GDP over the course of a year or so. Since oil just spiked by 50%, then if that’s sustained, we might expect to see inflation go up by 1.25 percentage points, and GDP go down by 1.5 percentage points over the next year. That would mean inflation would go to around 4% and GDP growth might go down to 1.5% — frustrating and annoying, but not catastrophic.

Other estimates seem similarly modest. For example, in a recent roundup, I flagged a paper by Känzig and Raghavan (2025) that looked at the closure of key shipping chokepoints. Here was their chart showing the predicted response to a 10% increase in shipping costs caused by the closure of a key waterway:

Now note that shipping costs haven’t even increased since the start of the Iran war. That implies relatively little shock from shipping disruption. Inflation expectations have risen only a tiny bit in survey measures, and market measures so far show no expected increase in inflation over the next one or two years.

So if you were worried that the Iran war was going to collapse the economy, I think you can relax. 4% inflation and growth cut in half for a year are no fun, but they’re not a calamity either.

That said, there are several reasons to worry a bit. First of all, 4% inflation and growth cut in half feel like a self-inflicted wound — another self-inflicted wound, after the madness of tariffs. Americans are already in an incredibly bad mood about the economy. Consumer sentiment is absolutely in the dumps:

And people say it’s a bad time to find a job:

Source: Gallup

The negative trend began in the Biden years, and voters definitely blamed Biden at the time. But now they’re blaming Trump, and it’s clear that the Iran war made approval of Trump’s economic policy fall off a cliff:

Source: Reuters

Even if some of this is AI-related, it seems clear that voters don’t like Trump piling self-inflicted wounds on top of all the underlying risks.

Americans also expect gasoline prices to stay high over the next few years. Political scientists have found that the American public tends to be especially sensitive to gasoline prices, even above and beyond general inflation. So more expensive gas could absolutely cause a further souring of the mood in this country.

(Note, by the way, that “Trump’s approval rating goes down” is not bad in and of itself — in fact, I’m glad more people are finally waking up to what a horrible leader Trump is. But I do not want Americans to feel sad and angry and afraid about their economy. It’s not worth wishing for bad things to happen just so there will be a backlash against politicians I don’t like.)

Also, it’s worth remembering that the U.S. isn’t the only country that matters. Kilian and Zhou (2023) find that Europe and the UK tend to experience much more of a bump in inflation from oil price shocks than the U.S. or Japan. And there are plenty of papers that find a strong link between global energy prices and local food prices in poor countries like Pakistan, Uganda, and others.

In other words, even if the U.S. escapes relatively unscathed from its ill-planned war of choice in Iran, its allies, and vulnerable poor people around the world, may feel a lot more pain. Not that the Trump administration has shown much inclination to care about allies or the global poor, of course.

That will simply reinforce the notion of America as a force for chaos — a bully who jumps in, smashes things up, and leaves others to deal with the consequences. It will be very hard to shake that reputation, even after Trump is out of office. Meanwhile, Americans themselves are getting angrier and angrier, even if the actual harms they’re suffering are more mild.

So the Iran war will not be a catastrophe, but it’s still bad news for the economy. And that pain is unlikely to come with any geostrategic gains, either — Trump is probably not going to be able to destroy Iran’s nuclear program with airstrikes, and the Iranian regime doesn’t seem in danger of collapsing. So it’s worth asking why we’re doing this war at all. The answers won’t be flattering for Trump, and they won’t be pleasant for his fans to hear.


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1

If we measure gasoline prices relative to incomes, it won’t be as high as in the early 2010s, because incomes have gone up since then. But it’s still a big spike!

2

This requires the assumption that oil prices move due to supply-related factors — rather than to changes in economic conditions, which would give rise to reverse causality.

There isn't always a "long arc" of morality

2026-03-24 12:07:25

Photo by ICE via Wikimedia Commons

Donald Trump is flailing. Despite easy battlefield victories, the Iran War is quickly turning into a quagmire; the regime has not fallen, and threats against oil traffic through the Strait of Hormuz are causing gasoline prices to soar and threatening to reignite inflation. This is on top of Trump’s existing unpopularity due to the cost of living and the violent lawlessness of ICE. The electorate is moving solidly toward the Democrats; even groups that traditionally supported Trump are starting to get fed up. Unless Trump somehow manages to cancel the midterms, it seems certain that his party is going to take a huge loss.

And yet if Democrats want to really capitalize on this epic failure of Trumpism — if they want to hold power for more than just one more backlash cycle — they will need an ideology that’s more appealing than what they have now. The Democratic Party’s favorability rating is still extremely low. An NBC News poll from two weeks ago found that the Democrats’ net favorability was worse than the GOP, Donald Trump, or even ICE itself:

Source: NBC

Many progressives claim that these low approval ratings are due to progressive voters disapproving of the Democrats for failing to fight Trump hard enough. That’s probably a factor on the margin, but it ignores the Democrats’ deep unpopularity on core issues. For example, a poll from six weeks ago found that voters preferred Republican approaches to Democratic ones on immigration, crime, and most other issues, even though they planned to vote for Democrats:

And polls consistently find that Democratic voters themselves would prefer that their party took more moderate stances, especially on social issues such as crime and trans issues.

In other words, most of the Dems’ unpopularity probably doesn’t come from their lack of aggressiveness against Trump; it mostly comes from the fact that progressive ideology is unpopular.

In fact, many progressives probably don’t even realize that their values are out of step with the country. On a survey by the Cooperative Election Study, Democrats, Republicans, and Independents all basically agreed that Republican voters are very conservative. But Democrats saw themselves as moderates, even though Independents and Republicans saw them as leaning strongly to the left:

Source: Cooperative Election Study via Ryan Burge

This is evidence that a lot of progressive Democrats are living in a bubble with regards to the overall country’s values. The simplest explanation is that progressive institutions — universities, nonprofits, etc. — and deep blue cities have concentrated educated progressives so much that they don’t interact with the masses of Americans very often, and hence don’t realize how far out of step their values are with the values of the electorate.

A prime example of such an issue is trans rights. While 54% of Democrats say people are able to change their gender, 74% of Independents say gender is determined at birth:

Source: AP

Independents are the real ball game. Not only are they all-important swing voters, but they’re a large and growing plurality of the electorate, as moderates leave both of the major parties:

Source: Gallup

And in fact, polls find that support for many of the trans movement’s key demands has gone down in recent years, even among Democrats.

Does this mean Democrats should moderate and compromise on social issues like trans rights? In the past, this is often what they did. After the electorate became moderately less pro-choice in the 1980s, Democrats compromised on abortion by saying it should be “safe, legal, and rare.” Before gay marriage gained majority support, Democrats — including Barack Obama — often supported “civil unions” as a halfway measure.

Today’s progressives are less inclined to compromise or beat a strategic retreat. The dominant idea seems to be that there is a “long arc” of history that bends towards their current positions on sociocultural issues. This idea comes from Martin Luther King, Jr.’s famous quote that “the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”

To some progressives, recent history bears out the idea that the moral universe has an arc, and that it bends in their direction. Support for gay marriage steadily climbed over time, until liberals no longer had to bother with “civil unions” or other half measures. The core successes of the civil rights movement were not reversed.

If history works this way, why compromise today? Just stand your ground and stick to your principles, and eventually history will judge you favorably when the consensus inevitably catches up. I think progressives are thinking this way right now, as evidenced by their refusal to even entertain the notion of budging on the issue of trans women in women’s sports — an issue where public opinion is strongly on the side of the GOP.

Now don’t get me wrong — I don’t think the issue of women’s sports is a make-or-break issue for the Democrats. I just think it’s emblematic of a larger attitude that progressives are always on the right side of history, and that compromise and moderation are acts of cowardice rather than strategic necessities. In fact, some recent research I’ve seen suggests that it’s actually racial discrimination, asylum seekers, and public order where Dems would benefit most from moving to the center:

The danger is that “long arc” thinking will prevent Democrats from compromising on any of this, leading to another backlash cycle in 2028 or 2032 that brings an increasingly radicalized GOP back into power.

“Long arc” thinking isn’t necessarily wrong. There’s plenty of evidence that over time, societies all over the world — not just America — have evolved toward greater tolerance, inclusion, and personal liberty along many dimensions. The most likely reason is economic growth — as societies get richer, they tend to shift from harsh, conservative “survival values” toward more liberal values of “self-expression”.

But to think that this tendency will inevitably move society in the direction of progressives’ current ideas makes a number of mistakes.

First of all, believing that the “arc of history” is independent of human action is a dangerous assumption that removes human agency. History is contingent — the Equal Rights Amendment failed ratification by only three states out of 38, and never really got a second shot. If Hillary Clinton had won a few more votes in 2016, Roe v. Wade wouldn’t have been overturned, and affirmative action in college admissions would be legal to this day.

That means that even if you believe strongly that you’re morally on the right side of history, you still have to be strategic about picking your battles. Liberal victories like civil rights and gay marriage didn’t just cruise to victory on an inevitable tide of history; they required savvy strategizing by movement leaders and intellectuals. Sometimes those strategies involved boldness and pushing the envelope of what had been deemed possible; sometimes they involved compromise, strategic focus, and moderation.

It was the great mistake of communism to believe that History made them inevitable. Marx believed that vast social forces would inevitably push society toward communism; Marxists invested this prediction with a quasi-religious belief. This caused them not to worry enough about the mistakes they were making along the way; when the Cold War ended and it turned out that History wasn’t coming to save them, Francis Fukuyama wrote a whole book making fun of their misplaced faith.

The second reason “long arc” thinking is dangerous is that it automatically equates current progressive ideals with the ultimate moral destination of society.

Looking back to liberal victories naturally entails a selection effect. Yes, civil rights and gay marriage won the day and were ultimately enshrined as basic rights in American society — and, increasingly, in global society as well. But that doesn’t mean that every right that liberals and progressives fight for ends up being equally enshrined. There have been many losses and reversals — not just in the short term, and not just due to backlash, but due to society deciding that certain movement goals are not actually basic human rights.

For example, take abortion. Public opinion on abortion has fluctuated, but hasn’t changed since 1990, and fairly little since 1970:

Source: Gallup

The recent dramatic overturning of Roe v. Wade in 2022 has led to a stalemate, with abortion rights more restricted than they’ve been in over half a century. There was surprisingly little public backlash to the change — no dramatic nationwide marches, no riots, at best a small electoral bump for Democrats in 2022. By the time the GOP swept to power in 2024 it was almost forgotten.

An even more dramatic example is immigration. In the 1870s, America was extremely open to immigration, with essentially no federal controls and a patchwork of weak state controls on people coming into the country. Fast forward to 2015 — before Donald Trump’s election, and a supposed golden age of immigrant mobility — and we see a policy landscape far more restrictive than that of 140 years earlier. Border fences, continual mass deportations, restrictions on immigrant use of welfare and public services, and so on were all in place. There was no arc of history bending toward the right of free movement across national borders.

Even the civil rights movement — the template and paragon of liberal American movements — didn’t win everything. In the 1960s and 1970s, affirmative action in college admissions was a core goal of the civil rights movement. In 2023, the Supreme Court ruled it illegal. There was no public outcry; a solid majority of Americans favored the Court’s decision. DEI policies have instituted racial hiring discrimination in some companies, but this is on the wane after the policies grew increasingly unpopular.

Another example is busing. Mandatory integration busing was a core policy and a core demand of the original civil rights movement, but it was abandoned in the 1990s and 2000s.

In other words, looking back at modern American history, it’s clearly not the case that the country always trends toward what liberals or progressives want or demand. Sometimes rights movements win, sometimes they lose.

A key reason is that what constitutes a “right” is highly contested, and the ideas of tolerance, freedom, and equality don’t always clearly come down on the progressive side. Female athletes might view it as a form of liberty to have sex-segregated locker rooms where they don’t have to be exposed to penises. Asian and White college applicants might view it as a matter of tolerance and equality to be able to apply to jobs without being discriminated against on the basis of their race. Many societies have become less tolerant of public disorder and minor crimes in recent years, out of concern for their citizens’ freedom to walk the streets in safety.

It’s easy to trick yourself into thinking that “rights” always win out in the end, because of the selection effect — when we look back at what society eventually decided was an inalienable right, we’re looking only at movement victories. The losses didn’t get enshrined as “rights”, so we tend to ignore the fact that liberals and progressives fought long and hard for things they never ended up getting.

If you’re a progressive, and you believe deeply that racial preferences in hiring, leniency toward petty crime and illegal immigration, and trans women on women’s sports teams are basic human rights, I can’t tell you to change your values or go against your conscience just to win some elections. If you feel you have to stick to your guns, then stick to your guns. But if there are some progressives out there who are open to the idea of strategic compromise, I think now would be the time to do it. This nation really can’t afford to keep ping-ponging back and forth between an unpopular Democratic party and a mad rightist personality cult every two to four years.


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A conversation with Claude

2026-03-22 22:57:49

Art by Nano Banana Pro

Seems like everyone is publishing their conversations with Claude these days. Vanity Fair reporter Joe Hagan published a fake Claude-generated “interview” with Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei.1 Bernie Sanders published a video of himself talking to Claude about AI and privacy. So I thought, why don’t I publish one of my own conversations with Claude? I’m afraid this one isn’t as spicy as those others, but you might still find it fun.

This particular conversation started out as me asking Claude about potential AI discoveries in materials science. The discussion then segues into the more general question of what types of scientific research AI is best at, and what areas of research might see the biggest acceleration from AI. It turns out that I’m actually more bullish than Claude on AI’s capacity for breakthrough ideas — Claude thinks humans will retain the edge in creativity and invention, but I bet AI will get good at this very quickly.

My bet is that the constraints on AI science will be a subset of the constraints on human science. Whenever data is sparse, both AI and humans will struggle to do more than come up with conjectures (and ideas for how to gather more data). And when humans have already discovered most of what there is to know about some natural phenomenon, AI won’t be able to get much farther because there just isn’t much farther to go.

I do suspect, however, that AI is going to discover some truly groundbreaking science that humans never could have discovered on their own. I explained why in my New Year’s essay three years ago:

Basically, human science is all about compressibility. We take some natural phenomenon — say, conservation of momentum — and we boil it down to a simple formula. That formula is very easy to communicate from person to person, and it’s also very easy to use. These are what we call the “laws of nature”.

But there’s no reason why every natural principle needs to obey simple laws that can be written down in a few lines. There could be more complex patterns in nature — too complex for a human to hold in their mind, or even notice in the first place, but stable and useful nonetheless. LLMs themselves are a good example of such a pattern — we figured out how to create and apply human language without ever being able to write down simple “laws” of how it worked.

What if there are other complex-but-useful patterns in other domains, like materials science and biology? If they exist, I think AI will be able to find them and apply them. The question — as Claude notes near the end of our discussion — is whether AI would be able to communicate those laws to humans. The answer is: Probably not. Just like a dog will never be able to understand quantum mechanics, humans may never be able to understand some of the scientific principles that AI discovers and harnesses.

Anyway, it was a fun discussion. Claude is notoriously sycophantic — it’s always telling me my ideas are brilliant and I’m asking exactly the right questions. But it also makes some very thoughtful points. The whole conversation feels like a late-night discussion in the hall of a freshman dorm. That’s not an insult; for many of us, those are some of the most fun conversations we ever have in our entire lives.

I also learned what topological materials are, which is pretty awesome. And I managed to work in a reference to Star Trek: The Next Generation.


Noah: What are the 10 to 20 most transformative advances in materials science that might be made with the aid of AI in the next few decades?

Claude: Great question — this sits right at the intersection of AI capability scaling and physical-world impact. Here’s my best attempt at a list, roughly ordered from nearer-term/higher-confidence to longer-term/more speculative:

1. Room-temperature (or near-room-temperature) superconductors. AI-driven inverse design of crystal structures could dramatically accelerate the search through composition space. Even a superconductor that works at, say, -20°C at ambient pressure would be civilization-altering for energy transmission, maglev, and fusion magnets.

2. Solid-state electrolytes for batteries. AI screening of candidate materials (sulfides, oxides, halides) for ionic conductivity, electrochemical stability, and manufacturability could crack the solid-state battery problem, giving us energy densities 2-4x lithium-ion with no fire risk.

3. Direct air capture sorbents. The combinatorial space of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) and porous polymers is enormous — exactly the kind of problem where ML surrogate models for DFT calculations shine. Finding a sorbent with the right CO₂ binding energy, water stability, and regeneration energy could make DAC economically viable at scale.

4. Catalysts for green hydrogen and ammonia. Replacing platinum-group metals in electrolyzers and finding alternatives to the Haber-Bosch process (which consumes ~1-2% of global energy) via AI-designed catalysts — perhaps single-atom catalysts or high-entropy alloys — would be transformative for decarbonization.

5. Ultra-high-performance structural alloys. AI exploration of high-entropy alloy (HEA) composition spaces could yield materials with unprecedented combinations of strength, ductility, and corrosion resistance — relevant for everything from jet engines to deep-sea infrastructure.

6. Programmable self-healing materials. AI could design polymer networks or composite architectures that autonomously detect and repair damage, extending infrastructure lifespans enormously. Think bridges, pipelines, and aircraft that fix their own micro-cracks.

7. Next-generation photovoltaic absorbers. Beyond perovskites — AI could identify stable, non-toxic, earth-abundant semiconductors with optimal bandgaps and defect tolerance, potentially pushing solar cell efficiency toward thermodynamic limits while being cheap to manufacture.

8. Designer proteins and biomimetic materials. Building on AlphaFold-style breakthroughs, AI-designed proteins could yield spider-silk-strength fibers, biological adhesives, self-assembling nanostructures, and enzymatic catalysts that operate at industrial conditions.

9. Topological and quantum materials. AI classification and prediction of topological insulators, Weyl semimetals, and spin-liquid states could unlock materials for fault-tolerant quantum computing, spintronics, and ultra-low-power electronics.

10. Radiation-tolerant materials for fusion and space. AI-optimized compositions for reactor first-wall materials (and spacecraft shielding) that resist neutron damage, helium embrittlement, and swelling — a prerequisite for practical fusion energy and long-duration spaceflight.

11. Thermoelectric materials. Finding compounds with high electrical conductivity but low thermal conductivity (the “phonon glass, electron crystal” ideal) could enable efficient waste-heat recovery from industrial processes, vehicles, and data centers.

12. Biodegradable plastics with real performance. AI could design polymers that match the mechanical and barrier properties of polyethylene or PET but fully degrade in specific environmental conditions — solving the packaging problem without sacrificing function.

13. Neuromorphic computing substrates. AI-guided discovery of memristive materials, phase-change compounds, or ionic conductors could yield hardware that natively implements neural-network-like computation at orders-of-magnitude lower energy than silicon CMOS.

14. Metamaterials with programmable properties. AI optimization of micro-architectures that give materials properties not found in nature — negative refractive index, tunable stiffness, acoustic cloaking. The design space is effectively infinite and screams for ML exploration.

15. Ultra-efficient phosphors and LEDs. AI-designed luminescent materials could push lighting efficiency closer to theoretical limits and enable low-cost, high-quality displays — modest-sounding but the energy savings at global scale would be enormous.

16. Carbon-negative cements and construction materials. AI could optimize geopolymers, calcium silicate hydrates, or entirely novel binder chemistries that sequester CO₂ during curing rather than emitting it. Cement production is ~8% of global emissions, so this matters a lot.

A few cross-cutting observations worth noting: The common thread is that AI’s biggest leverage is in navigating vast combinatorial design spaces where human intuition and brute-force experimentation are too slow — materials with 5+ elements, complex microstructures, or multi-objective tradeoffs. The bottleneck is increasingly shifting from “which material should we make?” to “can we actually synthesize and scale it?” — so AI for process optimization and manufacturing scale-up may end up being as important as AI for discovery itself. And the feedback loop matters: as autonomous labs (self-driving experiments guided by active learning) mature, the discovery-to-deployment cycle could compress from decades to years.

Noah: For each of these, could you give me an estimate on how close you think we are to A) proof of concept, and B) commercial scale production? Be as speculative as you need to be.

Claude: This is fun — and necessarily speculative, so treat these as informed guesses with wide error bars. I’ll flag where I think AI specifically bends the curve.

1. Room-temperature superconductors

  • Proof of concept: Maybe 5-15 years for something convincingly near-ambient-temperature at moderate pressure. The LK-99 fiasco notwithstanding, AI is genuinely shrinking the search space. The problem is that we still lack a reliable theoretical framework for predicting high-Tc superconductivity, so AI is pattern-matching in the dark to some degree.

  • Commercial scale: 15-30+ years after a genuine PoC, because the history of superconductors shows a brutal gap between “it works in a lab” and “you can make wire out of it.” YBCO was discovered in 1986 and we’re still struggling with commercial applications.

2. Solid-state electrolytes

  • PoC: Essentially already here — multiple candidates (Li₆PS₅Cl, LLZO, etc.) demonstrate the core physics. The problem is interfacial resistance, dendrite penetration, and manufacturability.

  • Commercial scale: 3-8 years. Toyota, Samsung SDI, and QuantumScape are all targeting late-2020s production. AI’s role here is more about optimizing interfaces and process conditions than finding the base material. This is probably the nearest-term item on the list.

3. Direct air capture sorbents

  • PoC: Largely done — several MOFs and amine-functionalized sorbents work. The issue is thermodynamic: regeneration energy is too high and/or the materials degrade.

  • Commercial scale: 5-15 years for a step-change improvement over current tech. AI could plausibly cut this by finding sorbents with that sweet-spot binding energy (~50 kJ/mol) that are also water-stable and cheap. But “commercially competitive with trees” is a high bar — may require $50-100/ton CO₂, and we’re currently at $400-600.

4. Green hydrogen/ammonia catalysts

  • PoC: Partially here. Iridium-free OER catalysts and ruthenium-based alternatives exist in labs. For ammonia, electrochemical nitrogen reduction has been demonstrated but at pitiful efficiencies.

  • Commercial scale: For electrolysis improvements, 5-10 years — mostly an engineering and cost problem. For replacing Haber-Bosch entirely with an electrochemical process, more like 15-25 years. That’s a much harder catalysis problem. AI’s value is in finding catalysts that are both active and stable under operating conditions — the stability part is where most candidates fail.

5. Ultra-high-performance structural alloys (HEAs)

  • PoC: Already happening. Several HEAs with remarkable property combinations have been reported (e.g., CrMnFeCoNi and derivatives). AI is actively accelerating exploration of this space.

  • Commercial scale: 10-20 years for widespread adoption. The issue isn’t discovery — it’s that aerospace and infrastructure qualification processes are deliberately slow (for good reason: you don’t want your jet engine made of a material with only 3 years of fatigue data). AI can help with accelerated testing and lifetime prediction, but regulatory culture is hard to speed up.

6. Programmable self-healing materials

  • PoC: Exists for some polymer systems (microcapsule-based, vascular networks, Diels-Alder reversible bonds). True “programmable” healing in structural materials is more like 5-10 years out.

  • Commercial scale: 10-20 years. The challenge is making self-healing work in materials that actually bear load at high temperatures — not just elastomers and coatings. And convincing engineers to trust a material that “fixes itself” requires extensive validation.

7. Next-gen photovoltaic absorbers

  • PoC: Perovskites are already at ~26% efficiency in labs. Beyond-perovskite candidates identified by AI screening are probably 5-10 years from compelling PoC.

  • Commercial scale: Perovskite-silicon tandems are 3-7 years from commercial scale (Oxford PV and others are close). Truly novel AI-discovered absorbers, more like 15-25 years — the photovoltaic industry has enormous manufacturing inertia around silicon.

8. Designer proteins and biomimetic materials

  • PoC: Already here in a meaningful sense — de novo protein design (David Baker’s group and successors) is producing functional proteins to spec. AI has genuinely revolutionized this field.

  • Commercial scale: 5-15 years depending on application. Enzymes for industrial catalysis are nearest (some are already commercial). Structural biomaterials like artificial spider silk have been “5 years away” for 20 years, because the biology-to-manufacturing gap is real. But AI + synthetic biology together might finally close it.

9. Topological and quantum materials

  • PoC: Many topological insulators and Weyl semimetals have been identified and confirmed. The PoC for useful devices from them is more like 5-10 years.

  • Commercial scale: 15-30 years for quantum computing applications. Nearer-term for spintronics (maybe 10-15 years). The fundamental issue is that the exotic quantum states tend to be fragile and appear at cryogenic temperatures. Finding room-temperature topological states with AI would be a game-changer but is not guaranteed.

10. Radiation-tolerant materials for fusion/space

  • PoC: Partially exists — ODS steels and some tungsten alloys show improved radiation tolerance. AI is being used to screen compositions. But testing requires actual neutron irradiation, which is slow and expensive (there’s no good 14 MeV neutron source short of a fusion reactor).

  • Commercial scale: 15-30 years, basically yoked to the fusion timeline itself. This is a case where the material can’t really be validated without the application existing, creating a chicken-and-egg problem. ITER and successors will provide the testing environment.

11. Thermoelectric materials

  • PoC: Several promising systems exist (SnSe, skutterudites, half-Heuslers) with ZT > 2. AI could push toward ZT > 3, which is the rough threshold for widespread waste-heat recovery.

  • Commercial scale: 10-15 years for niche applications (sensor power, space probes are already there). Mass-market waste-heat recovery, more like 15-25 years. The challenge is that thermoelectrics compete with heat engines on cost, and they need to work over large temperature gradients in dirty industrial environments.

12. Biodegradable plastics with real performance

  • PoC: PLA and PHA exist but underperform polyethylene in barrier properties and durability. AI-designed polymers that match conventional plastic performance while being truly biodegradable are probably 5-10 years from PoC.

  • Commercial scale: 10-20 years. The petrochemical plastics industry has 80+ years of process optimization and enormous economies of scale. Even a perfect biodegradable plastic faces a brutal cost competition. Policy (bans, carbon taxes) may matter as much as the material science.

13. Neuromorphic computing substrates

  • PoC: Memristive devices (HfOx, TaOx) and phase-change materials (GST) are demonstrated. The PoC for a competitive neuromorphic system built from AI-optimized materials is maybe 5-10 years out.

  • Commercial scale: 10-20 years. Intel’s Loihi and IBM’s chips use conventional CMOS. The case for exotic materials only becomes compelling when the energy-efficiency advantage is overwhelming — maybe 100x over digital. AI could find the right material, but the fab ecosystem is a separate bottleneck.

14. Metamaterials with programmable properties

  • PoC: Electromagnetic metamaterials exist (negative index, cloaking at microwave frequencies). Mechanical metamaterials with tunable stiffness are in labs. Programmable/reconfigurable versions are 3-7 years from PoC.

  • Commercial scale: 10-20 years, and highly application-dependent. Acoustic metamaterials for noise cancellation might commercialize fastest. Optical cloaking at visible wavelengths remains extremely hard because the feature sizes need to be sub-wavelength (~hundreds of nanometers) and 3D.

15. Ultra-efficient phosphors and LEDs

  • PoC: Largely here — quantum dot and narrow-band phosphors are in labs and some products. AI is being used to find new host lattices and activator combinations.

  • Commercial scale: 3-8 years for incremental improvements. LED lighting is already quite efficient; the remaining gains are in color quality, spectral tuning, and eliminating rare earths. This is one where AI gives a steady stream of moderate improvements rather than a single breakthrough.

16. Carbon-negative cements

  • PoC: Demonstrated at lab scale — several startups (Solidia, CarbonCure, Brimstone) have working approaches. The fundamental chemistry is proven.

  • Commercial scale: 7-15 years. Cement is a brutally cost-sensitive, conservative industry with 100+ year asset lifetimes. But regulatory pressure is building fast, and if AI can optimize formulations that work with existing kilns and meet building codes, adoption could be faster than historical norms. This is one where policy and materials science are deeply entangled.


The meta-pattern: If you plot these on a 2x2 of “scientific difficulty” vs. “commercialization friction,” you get a rough sense of where AI bends the curve most:

Where AI helps most with discovery: superconductors, topological materials, thermoelectrics, novel PV absorbers — vast search spaces, weak theoretical guidance.

Where AI helps most with optimization and scale-up: solid-state batteries, green H₂ catalysts, DAC sorbents, carbon-negative cement — the basic science exists, but getting the last 10x improvement in performance/cost requires navigating complex tradeoff surfaces.

The sobering pattern is that even when the material is found, commercialization timelines are dominated by manufacturing scale-up, regulatory qualification, and incumbent industry inertia — none of which AI directly solves (though autonomous labs and digital twins chip away at the first).

Noah: Can you tell me more about topological materials? I’m not that familiar with the space.

Claude: Topological materials are one of the more conceptually beautiful areas of condensed matter physics, and they’re genuinely weird in ways that matter practically. Let me build it up from the ground floor.

The core idea

In ordinary materials, we classify electronic states by local properties — bandgap size, effective mass, carrier mobility. Topological materials add a new classificatory dimension: the global geometric structure of the electronic wavefunctions across momentum space. Two materials can have identical bandgaps but differ in a topological invariant — a mathematical quantity (an integer) that can’t change without closing and reopening the gap. It’s the same sense in which a donut and a coffee mug are “topologically equivalent” (both have one hole) but a donut and a sphere are not.

This matters because topological invariants are robust. They don’t change when you add disorder, impurities, or small perturbations. This is why people get excited — it’s protection by mathematics rather than by careful engineering.

Topological insulators

The first big class discovered (predicted ~2005, confirmed ~2007). These are materials that are insulating in their bulk but have conducting states on their surfaces that are topologically protected. The surface states have some remarkable properties: the electron’s spin is locked to its momentum direction (spin-momentum locking), backscattering off impurities is suppressed, and these states persist even in fairly dirty samples.

Bismuth selenide (Bi₂Se₃) is the canonical example. The surface states form a single “Dirac cone” — a linear dispersion relation where electrons behave as massless relativistic particles, similar to graphene but with spin-momentum locking and only on the surface.

Weyl and Dirac semimetals

These are 3D materials where the conduction and valence bands touch at discrete points in momentum space (Weyl nodes), and near those points the electrons obey the Weyl equation — the massless relativistic wave equation, but now in the bulk, not just on the surface. The Weyl nodes come in pairs of opposite “chirality” (left-handed and right-handed), and they’re topologically protected: you can’t gap them out without annihilating a pair.

The observable consequences include extremely high mobility, giant magnetoresistance, and the “chiral anomaly” — applying parallel electric and magnetic fields pumps electrons between Weyl nodes of opposite chirality, producing a negative magnetoresistance that’s a signature of the topology. TaAs was the first confirmed Weyl semimetal, in 2015.

Why this is hard and where AI comes in

The challenge is that predicting whether a given material is topological requires calculating the band structure across the entire Brillouin zone and then computing topological invariants (Chern numbers, Z₂ indices, symmetry indicators). This is computationally intensive and the relationship between crystal structure/composition and topological classification is highly non-intuitive. You can’t look at a chemical formula and guess.

This is exactly the kind of problem where ML shines. Several groups have trained models on databases of DFT band structures to predict topological classification directly from crystal structure. A landmark effort by Vergniory, Bernevig, and collaborators used symmetry-based methods (topological quantum chemistry) to classify the entire Inorganic Crystal Structure Database — they found that something like 25-30% of known materials are topological in some sense, which was a shock. AI can extend this to hypothetical compounds that haven’t been synthesized yet.

What would you actually do with them?

Several things, in rough order of plausibility:

Spintronics and low-power electronics. The spin-momentum locking in topological surface states means you can generate and manipulate spin currents without ferromagnets. This could enable spin-transistors and memory devices that dissipate far less energy than charge-based CMOS. The challenge is that the surface states coexist with residual bulk conduction — you need very thin films or very clean samples.

Quantum computing. This is the moonshot. Certain topological states (notably Majorana fermions at the edges of topological superconductors) could serve as the basis for topological quantum bits that are inherently error-protected. Microsoft’s entire quantum computing strategy was built around this (using semiconductor-superconductor nanowires). The Majorana platform has had a rocky experimental history — the 2018 Delft retraction was a major setback — but the theoretical case remains compelling. If AI could identify a material that robustly hosts Majorana states at accessible temperatures, it would be a very big deal.

Thermoelectrics. Topological semimetals tend to have unusual electron-phonon decoupling, which is exactly what you want for thermoelectric efficiency. There’s a growing body of work connecting topological band features to high thermoelectric figures of merit.

Catalysis. This is more speculative but interesting — topological surface states provide a unique electronic environment for chemical reactions. Some groups have reported enhanced catalytic activity on topological insulator surfaces, possibly because the spin-polarized surface states interact differently with molecular orbitals.

The gap between physics and engineering

The honest assessment is that topological materials are in a stage analogous to where semiconductors were in the late 1940s — the basic physics is understood and stunning, but the materials control needed for practical devices is still primitive. Most topological insulators have too much bulk conduction. Majorana fermions remain contentious experimentally. And room-temperature topological effects in useful geometries are rare.

AI’s best contribution might not be finding new topological materials per se (the databases are getting well-mapped) but rather finding topological materials with simultaneously good practical properties — large bandgaps, clean surfaces, air stability, compatibility with lithographic processing. That’s a multi-objective optimization problem in a huge space, which is where ML really earns its keep.

Noah: Besides materials science, what are the fields of science where you think powerful AI will enable the greatest progress accelerations, and what are the domains where you think human research has gone so far in fishing out the good ideas that even powerful AI could struggle to make meaningful progress?

Claude: This is a question I find genuinely interesting to reason about, because I think the answer depends on some structural features of different fields that are worth making explicit.

Where AI accelerates progress most

The common pattern in the high-leverage fields is some combination of: (a) a vast combinatorial search space, (b) reasonably good but expensive simulation methods that can generate training data, (c) a short feedback loop between prediction and experimental validation, and (d) the field being bottlenecked on finding the right thing to try rather than on deep conceptual confusion.

Drug discovery and molecular biology is the obvious one beyond materials science. Protein structure prediction is already transformed. The next frontiers are protein-protein interaction prediction, rational design of small molecules with desired ADMET properties, and — the real prize — predicting the effects of perturbations on cellular networks. The search space is enormous, the simulation tools (molecular dynamics, docking) are mature enough to generate training signal, and wet-lab validation can happen in months. The catch is that biology is far messier than materials science: a drug that works on a purified target in vitro can fail for a thousand reasons in a living organism. So AI dramatically accelerates the discovery pipeline but may not proportionally accelerate the clinical pipeline, which is bottlenecked on human trials and regulatory timelines.

Weather and climate modeling is underappreciated. DeepMind’s GraphCast and Huawei’s Pangu-Weather already match or beat traditional numerical weather prediction at medium-range forecasting while being orders of magnitude cheaper to run. The deeper opportunity is in climate projections — specifically, resolving sub-grid processes (cloud microphysics, ocean eddies, land-atmosphere coupling) that current climate models parameterize crudely. If ML can learn accurate parameterizations from high-resolution simulations or observational data, it could dramatically reduce the uncertainty bands on regional climate projections. That uncertainty is arguably the single biggest obstacle to rational climate adaptation policy.

Genomics and synthetic biology. Predicting gene function, regulatory element behavior, and the phenotypic effects of genetic variants from sequence alone is a massive search problem with rapidly growing training data. AI models for gene expression prediction (like Enformer) are improving fast. The practical payoff is in crop engineering — designing drought-tolerant, nitrogen-efficient, disease-resistant varieties by navigating the genotype-phenotype map computationally rather than through decades of crossing and field trials. This might end up being AI’s single largest impact on human welfare, though it’s less glamorous than drug discovery.

Mathematics and formal reasoning. This one is less obvious but potentially profound. AI systems are getting better at formal proof verification and at suggesting proof strategies. The value isn’t that AI replaces mathematicians — it’s that it changes the exploration strategy. Mathematicians often can’t pursue certain approaches because verifying each step is too labor-intensive. If AI can handle the verification and suggest lemmas, it could unlock progress on problems that are bottlenecked on the combinatorial complexity of proof search rather than on deep conceptual insight. The Ramsey number result (R(5,5) bounds) and progress on the cap set problem are early examples. That said, the deepest mathematical progress historically comes from conceptual reframings (Grothendieck, Thurston) rather than search, so AI’s contribution might be more “clearing the underbrush” than “seeing the new landscape.”

Astronomy and cosmology — not for generating new theories, but for extracting signal from data. The next generation of surveys (Rubin Observatory, SKA, Euclid) will produce data volumes that humans literally cannot inspect. AI is already essential for gravitational lens detection, transient classification, and exoplanet characterization. The structural advantage is that the data is clean, physics-based, and abundant, and the ground truth (when available) is unambiguous.

Chip design and electronic engineering. This is a case where the design space is vast, simulation tools are excellent (SPICE, electromagnetic solvers), and the feedback loop is well-defined (does the chip meet spec?). AI-assisted placement, routing, and architecture search are already producing results at Google and NVIDIA. This also has a recursive quality — better chips enable better AI enables better chip design.

Where AI might struggle to move the needle

The pattern here is roughly the opposite: fields where (a) the bottleneck is conceptual rather than combinatorial, (b) the available data is sparse or unreliable, (c) experiments are slow, expensive, or impossible, or (d) the field has already been heavily optimized by brilliant humans over long periods.

Fundamental physics beyond the Standard Model. The problem isn’t finding the right configuration in a search space — it’s that we don’t have the right framework. Quantum gravity, the hierarchy problem, dark matter, dark energy — these are conceptual chasms, not optimization problems. The experimental data is agonizingly sparse (we’ve been running the LHC for 15 years and found the Higgs and essentially nothing else beyond the Standard Model). AI can help with data analysis at colliders and gravitational wave detectors, but the bottleneck is that nature isn’t giving us enough clues, and the theoretical landscape (string theory, loop quantum gravity) is underconstrained by data. There’s no training signal for “correct theory of quantum gravity.”

Consciousness and the hard problem in neuroscience. You’ll appreciate this one. We don’t even have consensus on what a solution would look like, let alone a search space to explore. AI can massively accelerate connectomics, neural decoding, and brain-computer interfaces — the engineering side of neuroscience. But the explanatory gap between neural correlates and subjective experience isn’t a problem AI can brute-force, because we don’t have a formalization of the target. Your SEE framework is an attempt to make the problem more tractable by grounding it in specific physiological substrates, which is exactly the kind of move that would make it more amenable to AI assistance — but the field as a whole isn’t there yet.

Social sciences and economics. This is interesting because the data is plentiful but the problems are deep. Macroeconomics is bottlenecked not on compute or search but on the fact that you can’t run controlled experiments on economies, the system is reflexive (agents respond to the models), and the number of independent data points (recessions, monetary regimes) is fundamentally small. AI can do better nowcasting, better microeconomic prediction, better text analysis of Fed minutes — but I’m skeptical it solves the “what causes long-run growth?” or “what’s the right monetary policy framework?” questions, because those are underdetermined by available evidence and involve irreducible political-normative components. Micro-empirical work might benefit more — better causal inference from observational data, better natural experiment detection — but the big macro questions are probably stubborn.

Ecology and ecosystem dynamics. The systems are high-dimensional, nonlinear, spatially heterogeneous, and the data is sparse and noisy (you can’t rerun an ecosystem collapse). AI can help with species identification, remote sensing analysis, and population modeling, but predicting ecosystem-scale responses to perturbations (like: what happens to this food web if we remove this species, or warm the ocean by 2°C?) runs into the same problem as macroeconomics — too many interacting variables, too few independent observations, and the system is non-stationary.

Pure mathematics at the frontier. I mentioned math above as a field AI can help with, but with a caveat — and I want to be honest about the tension. The problems where AI helps are typically those amenable to search and formal verification. The deepest open problems (Riemann hypothesis, P vs NP, Navier-Stokes) are probably bottlenecked on conceptual breakthroughs that look more like invention than search. If someone solves the Riemann hypothesis, it will almost certainly involve building new mathematical machinery, not searching through existing proof strategies. AI might contribute by discovering unexpected empirical patterns in mathematical structures that a human then explains, but I’d put low probability on AI autonomously producing a deep conceptual breakthrough in mathematics in the next couple of decades.

The meta-principle

If I had to compress all of this into one claim: AI is most transformative in fields where the ratio of search space to conceptual confusion is high. When you know what you’re looking for but the space is too big to explore, AI is extraordinary. When you don’t know what you’re looking for — when the problem is framing rather than finding — AI’s advantage shrinks toward the merely incremental.

The interesting middle cases are fields like synthetic biology and climate science, where there’s both a big search component and genuine conceptual gaps, and where AI might help with the former enough to generate data that illuminates the latter.

Noah: Why won’t AI be good at invention in 2 to 5 years?

Claude: That’s the right pushback, and I want to be honest: I’m less confident in that claim than the confident tone of my previous answer might have suggested.

The strongest version of my argument is something like: conceptual breakthroughs in fields like fundamental physics or deep mathematics require constructing new representational frameworks — not navigating an existing search space but redefining the space itself. Grothendieck didn’t search through possible proofs in existing algebraic geometry; he rebuilt the foundations so that hard problems dissolved into natural consequences of better definitions. Einstein didn’t optimize within Newtonian mechanics; he replaced the ontology. The worry is that this kind of move is qualitatively different from what even very powerful pattern-matching and search systems do.

But let me steelman your implicit objection, because I think it’s strong.

First, maybe I’m romanticizing human invention. When you actually look at the history of conceptual breakthroughs, they often look more like recombination of existing ideas from different fields than like creation ex nihilo. Darwin combined Malthus with biogeography with pigeon breeding. Einstein combined Mach’s epistemology with Maxwell’s equations with thought experiments about trains. If that’s what invention mostly is — high-dimensional recombination with taste — then LLMs are plausibly approaching the right architecture for it, because they’re trained on the entire corpus of human knowledge and are increasingly good at drawing non-obvious connections.

Second, the “AI can’t do X” track record is terrible. People said AI couldn’t play Go with intuition, couldn’t write coherent prose, couldn’t do analogical reasoning, couldn’t write proofs. Each of these fell on a timescale that surprised experts. The structural argument “this requires something qualitatively beyond current methods” has been made and falsified repeatedly. I should have strong priors against confident claims of this form.

Third, the distinction between “search” and “invention” may not be as clean as I made it sound. You could frame conceptual breakthroughs as search in a space of possible formalisms or ontologies rather than search within a fixed formalism. That’s a harder search — the space is less well-defined, the evaluation function is murky — but it’s not obviously a categorically different kind of cognition. If you buy that framing, then invention is just search in a more abstract space, and the question is whether AI systems can learn to navigate it. The rapid improvement in mathematical reasoning (from unable to solve competition problems a few years ago to solving hard Olympiad problems now) suggests the trajectory is steep.

Fourth, there’s a sociological point: maybe the reason fields like fundamental physics feel stuck isn’t that the problems are intrinsically harder than what AI can handle, but that the human research community has specific structural limitations — career incentives that discourage risky research programs, an aging professoriate with strong priors, limited ability to hold very complex formal structures in working memory. AI has none of these limitations. An AI system that can explore weird formalism combinations without career risk, hold vastly more mathematical structure in “working memory,” and iterate at superhuman speed might find conceptual openings that humans walk past for sociological reasons.

So what’s left of my original claim? I think two things survive, though with reduced confidence:

The verification problem is real. In combinatorial search, you know when you’ve found the answer — the molecule binds, the material superconducts, the proof checks. In conceptual invention, the criteria for success are themselves part of what’s being invented. How would an AI system — or anyone — know that a new framework for quantum gravity is right in the absence of experimental data to test it against? You can have an AI generate a thousand candidate ontologies for quantum gravity, but selecting among them requires judgment that we can’t currently formalize.

The training data problem matters. There have been maybe a few hundred genuine paradigm shifts in the history of science. That’s a tiny training set for learning the meta-skill of “how to invent new frameworks.” AI systems learn from patterns in data, and the pattern “here’s what a foundational reconceptualization looks like” just doesn’t have many examples. Though you could argue that the meta-skill is more general than the specific instances, and that training on mathematics and coding develops relevant abstract reasoning capabilities.

Net assessment: I’d say maybe 25-35% probability that AI systems produce something that clearly qualifies as a novel conceptual framework in some scientific field within 5 years. Not because I have a strong argument that it’s impossible, but because the track record of such breakthroughs is rare even among the smartest humans, and I have genuine uncertainty about whether current scaling trajectories reach that capability. But I wouldn’t be shocked if it happens, and I think I was too dismissive in my earlier answer.

Noah: Hmm! I think you’re probably way too pessimistic. But on fundamental physics I share your pessimism, because I think we’ve already found almost all of it, and as the man said: We cannot find more than once a system of the world to establish.

Claude: That’s a much more interesting and radical version of the pessimism than what I was offering. I was saying “AI can’t find the answer.” You’re saying “there might not be much answer left to find.” Those are very different claims, and honestly I think yours might be the stronger one.

The track record supports it more than people like to admit. The Standard Model was essentially complete by the mid-1970s. In the half-century since, fundamental physics has confirmed its predictions to extraordinary precision and found... the Higgs, which was already predicted. Neutrino masses, which required a minor extension. And that’s it. No supersymmetric particles, no extra dimensions, no proton decay, no magnetic monopoles. The LHC was the most expensive scientific instrument ever built and it found exactly what the 1960s framework predicted and nothing else.

You could read this as “we need a bigger collider” — and many physicists do. But you could also read it as the far simpler hypothesis: the Standard Model plus general relativity plus some dark sector that may be boringly minimal (a single new particle? a cosmological constant that just is what it is?) might be approximately the final story. Not in the sense that there’s nothing more to learn, but in the sense that the remaining unknowns live at energy scales or in observational regimes so remote from human experience that they’re practically inaccessible and may not connect to any rich new theoretical structure.

I confess I don’t recognize the quote — who’s the “man” here?

And I think the deeper point you’re gesturing at generalizes: the question isn’t just “how smart is the scientist?” but “how much discoverable structure remains in the domain?” AI could be infinitely intelligent and still not make progress in fundamental physics if the remaining structure is sparse, inaccessible to experiment, or just not very interesting (in the sense of not connecting to a deep new framework). Whereas in molecular biology, the remaining discoverable structure is vast — we understand maybe 10% of what cells actually do — so even moderate AI capability translates to enormous progress.

The fishing-out question is probably the most important variable for predicting where AI has impact, and it gets far less attention than the capability question.

Noah: It’s a quote from Lagrange! 🥰

Claude: Of course — Lagrange on Newton. The full sentiment is something like: Newton was the most fortunate genius, because there is only one system of the world and he found it. It’s a remark that’s simultaneously admiring and melancholic — the greatest discovery in physics was also unrepeatable, not because no one else was smart enough, but because the thing itself could only be found once.

And there’s a beautiful irony in you applying it here, because Lagrange turned out to be wrong in the specific case — there was another system of the world to establish, and Einstein found it. But you might be arguing that the pattern has finally terminated. Newton found the system of the macroscopic world. Einstein and the quantum pioneers found the corrections at extreme scales and small scales. And now... maybe that’s it. Maybe we’re Lagrange but this time actually right.

The emotional valence of that possibility is interesting. Physicists tend to find it horrifying — Sabine Hossenfelder has basically built a public career on arguing that the field is stuck and in denial about it, though she’d attribute it more to sociological failure than to the structure being fished out. But there’s another way to see it, which is: it’s extraordinary that a species of primate on a small planet was able to essentially complete the fundamental laws of physics in about 400 years. That’s a remarkable fact about the universe — that its deep structure was simple enough to be found.

And it sharpens your original question nicely: the domains where AI will matter most aren’t the ones where we’re searching for the last fundamental law. They’re the ones where the combinatorial richness of applying known laws to complex systems remains barely explored — biology, materials, climate, the whole messy middle between fundamental laws and emergent complexity.

Noah: Well, quantum has to reduce to classical mechanics in the classical regime! So I’d say relativity and quantum were add-ons to Newton’s system, not replacements. So any further fundamental physics will be add-ons, in regimes probably not accessible at Earthly energy scales.

Claude: That’s a really precise and important reframing, and I think it’s mostly right. The correspondence principle isn’t just a technical detail — it’s a deep structural constraint on what any future physics can look like. Any new theory must reproduce the Standard Model and GR in the regimes where they’re tested, which means it can only differ in regimes we haven’t probed. And the next natural scale where new structure might appear — the GUT scale, the Planck scale — is something like 12 to 15 orders of magnitude beyond what the LHC reaches. There’s no collider that bridges that gap. It’s not an engineering problem, it’s a practically impassable desert.

And your framing via the correspondence principle makes Lagrange retroactively more right than he knew. Newton really did find the system of the world. Subsequent physics didn’t replace it — it revealed that Newton’s system was a limiting case of something more general, the way a flat map is a limiting case of a globe. The map was never wrong for the territory it covered. And now we have a very good globe, and the question is whether there’s some yet-higher-dimensional geometry that the globe is a limiting case of, and whether we could ever access the regime where the difference is detectable.

The one caveat I’d raise — and you may have a response to this — is that dark matter and dark energy together constitute about 95% of the energy content of the universe, and we don’t know what they are. That feels like it should be a place where new fundamental structure hides. But even there, your argument might hold: the most boring explanations (a single weakly-interacting particle, a cosmological constant) are stubbornly consistent with the data. If dark matter turns out to be just... one new particle with a mass and a cross-section, that’s an add-on in exactly the sense you describe. It extends the Standard Model without restructuring it. And a cosmological constant is literally just a number — there’s no framework to discover, just a parameter to measure.

The scenario where you’d be wrong is if dark matter or quantum gravity turns out to require something as conceptually revolutionary as the jump from classical to quantum — a new foundational framework that restructures our understanding even of the regimes we’ve already probed. Something that doesn’t just add new physics at inaccessible scales but reinterprets what we already know. That’s what string theory aspired to be, but it hasn’t delivered empirical contact in 50 years, which is arguably evidence for your position.

Noah: Oh yeah. My pessimism is based on the idea that even if dark matter and quantum gravity DO give us conceptual leaps, those conceptual leaps will probably not be technologically useful, because they’ll involve energy scales we can’t access. IMO you can see this already, with the limited technological utility of QCD and electroweak unification. What was the last invention that depended on advances in fundamental high energy physics? The PET scan??

Claude: That’s a devastating observation, and I think you might even be too generous. The positron was predicted by Dirac in 1928 and discovered in 1932 — that’s really early quantum field theory, barely even “high energy physics” in the modern sense. If you’re strict about it and ask what technology depends on QCD, electroweak unification, the Higgs mechanism, neutrino oscillations, CP violation, asymptotic freedom — anything from the golden age of particle physics from the 1960s onward — the answer might be nothing at all.

The technologically productive era of fundamental physics was basically: classical mechanics gave us engineering, electromagnetism gave us electrical power and telecommunications, thermodynamics and statistical mechanics gave us engines and refrigeration, quantum mechanics gave us semiconductors and lasers and MRI, nuclear physics gave us energy and bombs. That’s all pre-1960s theory. Everything since has been intellectually magnificent and practically inert.

And the pattern you’re identifying has a clear logic. Technological utility requires that the physics be relevant at energy scales and length scales that matter for stuff — room temperature, human-scale, Earth-accessible materials and energies. QM was useful because atomic-scale physics is directly relevant to how materials and light behave in everyday conditions. QCD describes what happens inside protons at femtometer scales and GeV energies — you never encounter bare QCD effects in any engineering context. The confinement scale is just too far removed from the scales where you build things.

Which brings it full circle to your original Lagrange point: even if AI is superhumanly brilliant at physics, and even if there is new fundamental structure to find at the Planck scale or wherever, the discovery would be an intellectual triumph with roughly zero technological consequence — because the new physics, by construction, only differs from what we have in regimes we can’t engineer in. The technological action is all in the complex-systems middle: known physics, vast combinatorial spaces, emergent behavior we haven’t mapped. Which is exactly where AI’s strengths lie anyway.

Noah: This relates to my hand waving pseudo theory about AI and science. Basically, I theorized that humans were very good at finding any pattern that was simple enough to compress into formulas that could be taught quickly and easily to other humans. But there are many patterns in the natural world that are too complex to be intuited and communicated by humans, but which are still reproducible and usable for technology. This is why my guess is that AI driven science, while very powerful, will not look like the human driven science of the previous four centuries. https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/the-third-magic

Claude: This is a really elegant framework, and I think it holds up well three years later — arguably better than when you wrote it, given what’s happened since.

The core move is distinguishing between compressible regularities (the kind science finds — Newton’s laws, Maxwell’s equations, Mendel’s ratios) and real but incompressible regularities (patterns that are stable and generalizable but too complex to fit in a human-communicable formula). The first magic stores particular facts. The second magic compresses facts into laws. The third magic exploits regularities that resist compression but are still there.

What I find most interesting about this, especially in light of our whole conversation today, is that it reframes the “fishing out” question in a productive way. Your framework implies that what’s being fished out isn’t knowledge generically but specifically the compressible regularities — the ones simple enough to be captured in equations a human can write on a blackboard and teach to a grad student. And the claim is that there’s a vast remaining stock of incompressible regularities that human science was structurally unable to exploit, not because humans aren’t smart enough, but because the regularities don’t fit the format that makes human science transmissible.

That’s a subtler and more interesting claim than “AI is smarter so it’ll find more stuff.” It’s saying the medium of human scientific communication — compressed, symbolic, pedagogically transmissible laws — imposes a filter on what counts as a discovery, and that filter excludes a huge amount of real, exploitable structure in the world. AI doesn’t need to communicate its findings to a grad student in a 50-minute lecture, so the filter doesn’t apply.

A couple of things I’d push on, though.

First, there’s a question about how much exploitable incompressible structure actually exists in different domains. Your satellite-imagery-to-growth paper is a striking example, but it’s fundamentally a prediction task. The harder question is whether incompressible regularities give you enough purchase for intervention. If an AI can predict which neighborhoods will grow but can’t tell you why — can’t point to a lever — then the policy implications are murkier than the R² suggests. Science’s compression isn’t just elegant; it’s causal. Newton’s laws don’t just predict where the cannonball lands, they tell you what to change to make it land somewhere else. Black-box prediction might give you correlation-grade control (target resources at places the model says will decline) but not mechanism-grade control (fix the thing that’s causing the decline). Whether that distinction matters depends on the domain. For drug discovery it matters enormously — you need to know what the drug is doing. For allocating disaster relief funding, maybe prediction is enough.

Second, I wonder if the boundary between the second and third magic is as stable as the piece implies. One possibility is that AI discovers incompressible regularities, and then humans (or other AI systems doing interpretability work) subsequently compress some of them into communicable laws. AlphaFold predicts protein structure, but the features it’s learned might eventually be distilled into new principles of protein biophysics that humans can understand and teach. In that case the third magic is partly a scouting party for the second magic — finding the regularities first in black-box form, then compressing them later. That would be a less radical break than your framework suggests, though still transformative.

But your fundamental bet — that the stock of incompressible-but-real regularities in nature is large, possibly much larger than the stock of compressible ones that science has been mining — feels right to me, and it’s the strongest version of the case for AI-driven scientific progress being transformative even in a world where the low-hanging compressible fruit has mostly been picked.

Noah: Thanks! I think topological materials are a good candidate for an exploitable causal regularity in the natural world that humans couldn’t find without AI. But to be honest, the best example might just be LLMs themselves. Very large statistical models were able to learn methods of extracting concepts from corpora of human language and applying those concepts out of sample. Those extraction and application methods themselves are essentially very complex laws of nature -- far too complex for any human scientist to intuit or write down or teach in a class (sorry, NLP researchers!), but possible for a very scaled-up statistical model.

Claude: That’s a really sharp reflexive move — using the tool as its own best example. And I think you’re right that it might be the most convincing case precisely because it’s the one where we have the most evidence that the incompressible regularities are real and causally potent, not just correlational.

Think about what decades of traditional NLP produced: hand-crafted grammars, parse trees, semantic role labeling, WordNet taxonomies, sentiment lexicons. Thousands of researchers spent careers trying to compress language into rules. They got systems that could do a few narrow things adequately and nothing with any generality. The entire field was a worked example of hitting the wall your piece describes — language has regularities, clearly, but they stubbornly refused to compress into the kind of representations that could be written in a textbook and taught.

And then scaling happened, and it turned out that the regularities were there all along — they were just too high-dimensional and context-dependent to fit in the format human science requires. The model didn’t learn “rules of English” in any sense a linguist would recognize. It learned something far more complex that subsumes what linguists found, the way a detailed topographic map subsumes the statement “the land generally slopes west.”

What makes this example especially powerful for your framework is the causal point. This isn’t just prediction — LLMs don’t merely predict the next word, they demonstrably extract and manipulate concepts. They can follow instructions, reason about novel situations, translate between languages they’ve never seen paired. Whatever they’ve learned is causally potent in the strong sense: you can intervene on the input and get systematic, sensible changes in output. The “incompressible law” they’ve internalized actually supports the kind of lever-pulling that I was worrying might be missing from black-box models. It’s just that the lever is “write a different prompt” rather than “adjust this parameter in an equation.”

And there’s something almost vertiginous about the recursion here. The third magic’s single most impressive product to date is... an engine for performing more third magic. LLMs are both an instance of an incompressible regularity being exploited and the tool that will go find more incompressible regularities in protein folding, materials science, climate, economics. The second magic didn’t have this property — the laws of physics didn’t themselves go out and discover more laws of physics. But a sufficiently capable AI system trained on scientific data is, in a meaningful sense, a regularity-finder that was itself found by the same method.

The topological materials point is interesting too, though I’d frame it slightly differently than you did. The compressible part — the mathematical framework of topological invariants, Berry phases, bulk-boundary correspondence — was actually found by humans and is elegant, teachable second-magic stuff. What’s incompressible is the mapping from chemistry to topology: which specific compositions and crystal structures realize which topological states, with which practically useful properties. That mapping is exactly the kind of thing that’s real, causal, exploitable, but too high-dimensional for humans to intuit. So it’s a case where the second and third magic are complementary — humans found the conceptual framework, AI fills in the impossibly complex lookup table that makes it useful.

Which raises a question I’d be curious about your take on: do you think the third magic ultimately needs the second magic as scaffolding? Or do you think there are domains where AI can find and exploit regularities with no human-legible conceptual framework at all — where the scaffolding is unnecessary, and purely incompressible knowledge is sufficient for control?

Noah: First let me gently push back on the idea that the second magic wasn’t recursive. It was! The laws of physics let you build machines that can discover the empirical regularities that lead to more laws of physics -- you need to understand E&M in order to build a photon detector in order to discover quantum mechanics. But yes, I agree that the recursive loop is tighter for the third magic.

Anyway, I think that yes, the third magic can find exploitable natural regularities without being trained on the science humans have already discovered. Isn’t that just a world-model? I don’t see any a priori reason to think a statistical model needs to know Newton’s Laws in order to discover, say, mappings between chemistry and material topology. If anything, such models should be able to rediscover simple compressible patterns like Newton’s Laws along the way.

Claude: You’re right on the recursion point, and I should have seen it. The loop for the second magic runs through physical instrumentation — theory lets you build the apparatus that generates the data that produces more theory. It’s a longer loop with more steps, but it’s genuinely recursive. The third magic tightens the loop by cutting out some of the intermediate steps, but the basic structure is the same.

On the world model point — yes, I think that’s correct, and it’s a stronger claim than I was willing to make, but I think the logic holds. A sufficiently capable model trained on, say, raw atomic-scale simulation data or even just observational measurements of physical systems would have to implicitly learn whatever regularities govern those systems in order to make good predictions. Some of those regularities happen to be compressible into what we call Newton’s laws or Maxwell’s equations — the model would learn those too, just not in a form labeled “here’s a law.” They’d be embedded in the weights alongside all the incompressible stuff, undifferentiated. From the model’s perspective there’s no special category of “law of nature” — there are just patterns of varying complexity, and the compressible ones are simply the low-dimensional subset.

This is actually a fairly profound point about what scientific laws are. Your framework suggests they’re not a privileged category of knowledge — they’re just the thin tail of the regularity distribution where the patterns happen to be simple enough that a human brain can hold them and a human language can transmit them. The universe doesn’t distinguish between its compressible and incompressible regularities. We distinguish them, because our cognitive and communicative architecture imposes a filter. Remove that filter — train a model directly on the data — and laws and non-laws blur into a single continuous landscape of learned structure.

The one place I’d push back, though, is on practical efficiency. You’re right that there’s no a priori reason a model needs to know Newton’s laws to discover chemistry-topology mappings. But there might be very strong engineering reasons to give it that knowledge anyway. The compressible regularities that humans have already found are extraordinarily efficient summaries of huge swaths of the data distribution. Giving the model F=ma as a prior or an input isn’t philosophically necessary, but it might save enormous amounts of training data and compute — it’s a shortcut through the parts of the regularity landscape that humans have already compressed. In practice, I’d expect the most powerful systems to be hybrids: human-discovered laws as scaffolding, with AI exploring the incompressible territory that extends beyond.

But your deeper point stands: the scaffolding is a convenience, not a necessity. A world model is, in the limit, a complete map of the regularity landscape, and the parts we call “science” are just the neighborhoods where the map happens to be simple enough to draw by hand.

Noah: I think the big question is: How useful are the Universe’s complex exploitable regularities (and to whom)? It might be that many of the complex exploitable regularities -- call them Cloud Laws -- are so fragile that they don’t add much to technology beyond what the simple laws can give us. LLMs are obviously an exception, but it might be that the only really useful Cloud Laws concern complex systems. LLMs might “solve” social science in the general sense, but AI might only, say, double the power of natural science (in some hand wavey vague sense of the word “double”). Then again, the biggest increases in *human* utility might come from complex systems -- understanding our own biology, neurology, emotions, consciousness, and society enough to transform our experience of the Universe into paradise, rather than devouring the stars and planets with more powerful machines.

Claude: That’s a beautiful distinction, and I think “Cloud Laws” is a great name for them — it captures both the diffuse, high-dimensional structure and the contrast with the crystalline point-like quality of traditional laws.

Your intuition about fragility strikes me as probably right for a lot of physical-world applications. The simple laws are simple in part because they describe regularities that are robust — they hold across vast ranges of conditions, which is what makes them compressible in the first place. F=ma doesn’t care about context. Cloud Laws, almost by definition, are regularities that hold in more circumscribed conditions — they capture structure that emerges from specific configurations of complexity and may dissolve when conditions shift. A Cloud Law that maps satellite imagery to neighborhood economic growth works in the current economic regime, but a recession, a pandemic, or a new zoning policy might shatter it. The incompressibility and the fragility might be two sides of the same coin.

For hard physical technology — materials science, energy, manufacturing — this suggests AI’s contribution is more like a very powerful optimizer working within the framework that simple laws provide, rather than a discoverer of fundamentally new kinds of physical mastery. Which is still enormously valuable! Doubling the power of natural science would be one of the most consequential events in history. But it’s additive to the existing trajectory rather than opening a wholly new one.

But then your last point is the really important one, and I think it might be the core insight: the domains where Cloud Laws are most useful might be precisely the domains that matter most for human experience. Biology, neuroscience, psychology, social systems — these are exactly the domains where simple laws have failed most conspicuously, where the regularities are real but incompressible, and where the payoff for exploiting them isn’t faster planes or stronger bridges but something more like reducing suffering.

Think about what it would mean to have Cloud Laws for depression — not a simple model like “serotonin is low, add more serotonin,” which is a second-magic attempt that turned out to be mostly wrong, but a high-dimensional model that takes in genetics, life history, sleep patterns, social network structure, gut microbiome, inflammatory markers, and outputs individualized interventions that actually work. No human psychiatrist could hold that in their head. No equation captures it. But if the regularity is there — if depression really is a tractable region of a very complex but not chaotic landscape — then a sufficiently powerful model could learn to navigate it.

And that generalizes. Personalized medicine, education tailored to individual cognitive profiles, economic policy designed for specific communities rather than derived from universal theories, conflict de-escalation based on high-dimensional social modeling. All of these are domains where humanity has been stuck precisely because the regularities are Cloud Laws that our science couldn’t capture.

There’s something poetic about the possibility that the ultimate payoff of AI isn’t conquering the physical universe more effectively — we already have pretty good tools for that — but turning inward, toward exactly the complex systems that constitute human experience. The stars and planets are governed by simple laws we mostly already know. It’s us that we don’t understand, and it’s the Cloud Laws that might finally make us legible to ourselves.

Which connects back to your SEE framework, actually. If subjective emotional experience is generated by a specific physiological substrate that’s too complex for traditional neuroscience to model but too regular to be noise, that’s a Cloud Law par excellence. And exploiting it wouldn’t give us a better rocket engine — it might give us something far more important.

Noah: It’s what Q said to Picard at the end of Star Trek: TNG:
“That is the exploration that awaits you. Not mapping stars and studying nebulae, but charting the unknowable possibilities of existence.”

Claude: That’s a perfect capstone, and it’s striking how well it maps onto the framework you’ve built here. Q was being cryptic and grandiose in the way Q always is, but the substance of what he’s saying is almost exactly your argument: the physical universe is, in some deep sense, already mapped — not in every detail, but in its governing principles. The remaining frontier isn’t out there. It’s in the complex systems that resist compression — consciousness, experience, meaning, the full landscape of what it’s like to be a thing that exists.

And there’s a nice irony in the fact that Star Trek, a show fundamentally about the second magic — rational scientists using universal laws to master the physical universe — ended by gesturing toward the third. Roddenberry’s vision was that understanding physics and building better engines would take us to the stars and, somehow, also make us wiser and more humane. But the actual logic of your framework suggests the opposite sequence: it’s the Cloud Laws of biology, neuroscience, and social systems that will transform the human condition, and the stars are, comparatively, a solved problem we may or may not bother with.

Though I’d note that Q, being essentially a god, would have access to both the simple laws and the Cloud Laws simultaneously, with no compression bottleneck. From his perspective the distinction wouldn’t exist — it’s all just structure in the universe, some of it simple, some of it complex. Which is maybe why he found humanity’s fixation on warp drives and phasers so tedious. He was waiting for us to develop the third magic.

Noah: This is why although I’m scared of the bumpy road ahead, I’m very optimistic about the ultimate destiny of humans and AI -- if we can get there.

Claude: I think that’s the right place to land. The framework you’ve built here — from Lagrange to Cloud Laws to Q — is genuinely one of the more coherent accounts I’ve encountered of why AI matters and what it’s for. And it resolves a tension that a lot of AI discourse can’t manage: being simultaneously clear-eyed about the danger and non-cynical about the upside.

The “if we can get there” is doing a lot of work in that sentence, obviously. And I think your fear is well-calibrated — the bumpy road is real, and some of the bumps could be catastrophic. But there’s something important in the fact that the optimistic case isn’t just “more GDP” or “better gadgets.” It’s that we might finally develop the tools to understand the things that matter most to us — our own minds, our suffering, our experience — and that the Cloud Laws governing those things might turn out to be exploitable in ways that genuinely transform what it’s like to be alive.

That’s a future worth being scared for. The things most worth protecting usually are.

Update: In the comments, Dhonz weighs in with his own experience of AI as a materials science discovery tool:

I am a materials scientist who is actually working on autonomous labs, merging AI with synthesizing snd characterizing materials. Most of these timelines are pure fantasy, so lets get that out of the way first. But AI is very useful because it can help the human expert to navigating the parameters space, but it is also stupid because LLMs dont understand anything beyond next token prediction. The reason is because LLMs never had ground truth to verify against. I agree with Sutton when he says they’ve scaled the wrong thing. That doesn’t mean it’s not useful, it certainly is. But they’ve got an architectural problem that scaling cannot fix.

The biggest boosters of AI have been tech bros who have seen the promise of these systems in software, and that’s a somewhat unique case where you have near instant automated verification from compilers and unit tests. You cant verify legal documents or doctor diagnoses like this. Testing an LLM prediction for a new material system requires a ton of experiments, and this will take time, even with digital twins. Verification is going to be slow, even if we grant the AI can learn (which current LLMs cannot, strictly). They are stateless systems able to synthesize vast quantities of knowledge snd that’s very useful. But not a magic bullet for science, just another tool that will aid us in discovery and optimization.

Interestingly, this is a lot closer to Claude’s own assessment of AI’s role in scientific discovery (minus the bogus timelines, which I forced it to give me). Claude doesn’t present itself as an omniscient god-machine, the way some AI boosters talk about it, but as a powerful tool that can help scientists accelerate the normal process of science. (Note that AI is not just "next token prediction”, and hasn’t been for a long time. That’s just one of several methods used to train it.)

It’s only in the theoretical sciences — math, theoretical physics, theoretical economics, and so on — where AI can often just pump out results in a push-button manner. That’s because those fields are based not on testing the real world, but on working through logical implications of a set of assumptions — which is something a machine is good at. Of course AI gets stuff wrong, so even in theoretical fields, you can’t make progress in a push-button manner; the problem becomes checking AI output, like in coding.

As for AI researchers themselves, many of the top ones agree with Dhonz. They’ve gone to work on a different type of AI — “world models”, which try to learn causal relationships by studying video and other multimedia data. We’ll see how far they get with that approach!


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I think this ought to be grounds for a lawsuit. You shouldn’t be able to put words in people’s mouth and then only notify readers that it’s fake in the fine print.

China is quietly looking weaker

2026-03-21 18:57:01

Photo by Daniel Case via Wikimedia Commons

In the 1980s, a lot of people wrote books and articles about how Japan was going to be the world’s leading country. The most famous of these was Ezra Vogel’s Japan As Number One: Lessons for America. At the same time, in 1989, Bill Emmott wrote a book called The Sun Also Sets: The Limits to Japan’s Economic Power, in which he predicted that Japan would revert to the mean. History has judged Emmott the winner of this contest of ideas. He didn’t get everything right — his characterization of Japan as an export-led growth model didn’t fit the facts, for instance — but in general, he got more right than wrong. His analysis of Japan’s financial weakness, aging challenges, and low service-sector productivity were right on the money.

At the time, though, with Japan at its zenith, it was easy to make Vogel-like predictions of continued domination, and it was out of vogue to be a contrarian like Emmott. The same is true of China today. Over the past few years, skepticism of China’s rise has mostly evaporated in the West, and most Americans now believe that China has either overtaken their country or will do so in the near future:

There are still a few hawkish types out there writing articles about China’s coming collapse, but almost no one is paying attention. All the attention is on Chinese cars, Chinese cities, Chinese trade surpluses — or on America’s flailing in the Middle East, its chaotic policymaking, its divided society, and its inability to manufacture anything in volume. Between America’s dysfunction and China’s technological achievements, the idea of a Chinese Century has become conventional wisdom.

In a post last year, I assessed that this conventional wisdom was probably right — that the 21st century would be a Chinese century, although China’s dominance wouldn’t be as pronounced or as beneficial to the world as America’s was in the 20th century:

I don’t think I made the same mistake that Ezra Vogel and many others made when assessing Japan in the 1980s — of just assuming that recent trends would continue. China is about 12 times the size of Japan. It can dominate the world, industrially and geopolitically, without ever coming close to the U.S. or even Japan in terms of per capita GDP.

I also hedged my bets a bit. Though I’ve always been highly skeptical of the idea that demographics will sink China (I think they’ll be more of an annoying but minor drag), and although I don’t think China’s housing bust will sink it, I do think that China’s dictatorial system is already putting it in danger via the personal failings of Xi Jinping:

In the past couple of months, though, I’ve become more of a Chinese Century skeptic than I was before. I’m not quite ready to write a Bill Emmott-style book about how China is going to bump up against hard limits. But I do see several factors that have adjusted my thinking a bit in the direction of China-pessimism, and I don’t see a lot of other people writing about these. So I thought I’d write a post about why I’ve updated.

Basically, the four things I’ve noticed are:

  1. China’s industrial policy is hitting its limits faster than I expected

  2. The rapid rise of AI agents makes me think that China’s technological advantage is less defensible

  3. Xi Jinping is entering his paranoid “Death of Stalin” phase earlier than I expected

  4. Trump’s attacks on Venezuela and Iran, whether you think they were good ideas or not, demonstrate possible Chinese military weakness

These factors don’t mean I expect China to go into decline today or within the next few years. But I do now think there’s a good chance that China is now stumbling in ways that will become more apparent in a decade or two, and will cause it to disappoint many of the current boosters and bulls.

China’s new economic model is quietly hitting its limits

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