
"OpenAI's policy paper presents bold ideas like robot taxes and public wealth funds, but it never once mentions cognition, which is a critical aspect of human experience."
"Intelligence, as defined in the document, is treated as a product that can be metered and sold, fundamentally changing our relationship with our own minds."
"Cognition is a process built through effort and human experience, contrasting sharply with the commodification of intelligence that the paper advocates."
OpenAI's policy paper, titled Industrial Policy for the Intelligence Age, presents ambitious ideas like robot taxes and a four-day workweek. However, it fails to address cognition, which is a process rather than a product. The paper frames intelligence as a commodity, suggesting a future where it is sold like utilities. This shift may alter how humans perceive their own minds, viewing them as customers of cognitive support rather than sources of thought. The omission of cognition raises questions about who is addressing the human aspect of intelligence in this new era.
Read at Psychology Today
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]