Real World Facts About AI

Real World Facts About AI
James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

Much of the current discussion about artificial intelligence assumes it will remake employment, culture, and daily life in decisive ways. The record so far suggests otherwise. The displacement that has occurred has been concentrated inside the technology sector itself—the very industry that produces these systems.

Broader unemployment figures reflect a longer-running economic contraction, one that official statistics have been adjusted to obscure. Policymakers have treated the management of public expectations as a necessary tool of economic management. When citizens believe conditions are stable, they continue to spend. When they do not, they conserve. The preservation of spending has therefore taken precedence over transparent measurement.

Manufacturing offers a clearer example of what is actually happening. The introduction of more sophisticated machines on factory floors is an extension of mechanization that began long before the computer age. Each improvement raises output per worker. That process has been continuous since the first tools replaced hand labor. It does not represent a break with the past; it continues an established pattern.

Biological systems operate differently. Living organisms register opportunities and dangers in real time and adjust without prior programming. An artificial system, by contrast, remains fixed until it receives new instructions or updated data. When conditions depart from what it has been trained to expect, it has no independent capacity to recognize the change or respond appropriately. That gap is not temporary. It follows from the difference between a process that must be directed and one that is self-directing by nature.

The commercial prospects for artificial intelligence are correspondingly narrow. Its owners can extract returns only to the extent they can shape how the public thinks and behaves. Human populations, however, develop habits of resistance to arrangements that work against their interests. Those habits form and spread without central direction. An artificial system cannot match the speed or variety of that adjustment because it lacks any internal mechanism for registering what people actually experience as harmful or beneficial.

The same limitation appears in the way these systems address individuals. People differ sharply in temperament, history, and immediate circumstances. An artificial intelligence registers none of those distinctions. It applies the same response pattern to every user. Where human problems turn on nuance, context, or conflicting motives, the system has no resources with which to engage them.

Claims that artificial intelligence will upend entertainment and music overlook how markets actually function. These systems can generate content at low marginal cost. The result is not the disappearance of those industries but their reduced capacity to support paid work. Audiences respond to lower prices by consuming more of what is free or nearly free. The volume of material rises while the revenue available to support professionals decreases.

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