Glen Weyl, Ph.D.

Alternatives to Technocracy & the Ideology of Artificial Intelligence

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In this episode I speak with Glen Weyl about the ideology of artificial of intelligence, central planning, Communist China, and the problem of technocracy. In a wide-ranging conversation we also talk about collaboration, knowledge and experience, decentralization, individualism, and the Ukranian Genocide—and a number of thinkers including James Scott, Alexis de Tocqueville, Georg Simmel, Joseph Ratzinger, and more. We also discuss subways, coffee, complex society, and problem of ignoring the invisible. It was a lot of fun. Glen is an innovative and very interesting the thinker. He is a political economist and social technologist at the office the Technology Officer at Microsoft. He is also the founder of Radical XChange and the co-author, with Eric Posner, of the book Radical Markets.

In this episode, I speak with Glen Weyl about the ideology of artificial of intelligence, central planning, Communist China, and the problem of technocracy. In a wide-ranging conversation we also talk about collaboration, knowledge and experience, decentralization, individualism, and the Ukranian Genocide-and a number of thinkers including James Scott, Alexis de Tocqueville, Georg Simmel, Joseph Ratzinger, and more.

Resourses

Douglas Engelbart  Collaborative Technology

Neural Networks

Facial Recognition

Fully Automated Luxury Communism

Aristotle on Phronesis or Practical Wisdom, Experience: Aristotle wrote in the Nicomachean Ethics: 

although the young may be experts in geometry and mathematics and similar branches of knowledge, we do not consider that a young man can have Prudence. The reason is that Prudence includes a knowledge of particular facts, and this is derived from experience, which a young man does not a possess; [6] for experience is the fruit of years.(One might indeed further enquire why it is that, though a boy may be a mathematician, he cannot be a metaphysician or a natural philosopher. Perhaps the answer is that Mathematics deals with abstractions, whereas the first principles of Metaphysics and Natural Philosophy are derived from experience: the young can only repeat them without conviction of their truth, whereas the formal concepts of Mathematics are easily understood.   (1142a)

Joseph Ratzinger: Critique of Positivism and Empiricist Rationality: Regensburg Address

Turing test 

Connatural or Poetic Knowledge

Karl Stern on Connatural Knowledge: See Flight from Woman, especially Chapter 3

Also look at Iain McGilchrist, The Master and Its Emissary

Michael Polanyi on “inarticulate rationality” in Personal Knowledge

I found this short video on connatural knowledge that is good start

Anibal Quijano  

Alexis de Tocqueville: Centralization and Individualism

Georg Simmel

Roger Scruton

Martha Nussbaum 

James Scott: Seeing like a State

Holdomor: Ukrainian Genocide

Short Summary on Stalin and the Ukrainian Holdomor

The Russian Century: Good short book on 20th century Russia/Soviet Union by Brian Moyhahan

There is a recent movie about the Ukrainian Genocide and Stalin’s regime. Mr. Jones on Amazon Mr. Jones on iTunes This movie is not meant for children. There are scenes of decadence and depiction of violence that should be approached with caution.


Website

Twitter: @glenweyl

Radical Exchange

Videos

This is the video on coffee and complexity I mentioned in the podcast. It is part of the Good Society from Acton Institute


For those of you more interested in coffee—here is the long version that includes a bit more information.

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Essays

Ignoring the Invisible This is the essay I wrote on the complexity and the invisible that I mentioned in the podcast.

Here is the quote from Roger Scruton I mentioned

To say that this is ‘scientific’ rather than utopian is, in retrospect, little more than a joke. Marx’s remark about hunting, fishing, hobby farming and lit. crit. is the only attempt he makes to describe what life will be like without private property – and if you ask who gives you the gun or the fishing rod, who organizes the pack of hounds, who maintains the coverts and the waterways, who disposes of the milk and the calves and who publishes the lit. crit., such questions will be dismissed as ‘beside the point’, and as matters to be settled by a future that is none of your business.

Books

Disclosure

Michael Matheson Miller and the Moral Imagination Podcast  is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.   Some links may be affiliate links. We may get paid if you buy something or take an action after clicking one of these

 
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Anthony Bradley, Ph.D.

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Joel Salatin