The French mystical writer
Simone Weil (d. 1943) warned in the 20th century about the cold,
soulless, mechanical nature of government that had come into existence:
‘The State is a cold concern
which cannot inspire love, but itself kills, suppresses everything that might
be loved; so one is forced to love it, because there is nothing else. That is the moral torment to which all of us
today are exposed.
‘Here lies perhaps the true
cause of that phenomenon of the leader which has sprung up everywhere nowadays
and surprises so many people. Just now,
there is in all countries, in all movements, a man who is the personal magnet
for all loyalties. Being compelled to
embrace the cold, metallic surface of the State has made people, by contrast,
hunger for something to love which is made of flesh and blood. This phenomenon shows no signs of
disappearing, and, however disastrous the consequences have been so far, it may
still have some very unpleasant surprises in store for us; for the art, so well
known in Hollywood, of manufacturing stars out of any sort of human material,
gives any sort of person the opportunity of presenting himself for the
adoration of the masses’ (The Need for Roots, Arthur Wills translator,
Routledge Classics, New York, 2003, p. 114).
She saw more keenly than she
realized. For it is no longer simply the
case that ideologically driven revolutionaries; heartless bureaucrats; greedy
oligarchs; etc., who are bereft of the warmth of Christian love and kindness,
have taken over the offices of government and wield its power. Now we are witnessing the transformation of
the State into an actual machine, as AI is becoming an integral component of
the governing system:
‘Artificial intelligence (AI)
is writing law today. This has required no changes in legislative procedure or
the rules of legislative bodies—all it takes is one legislator, or legislative
assistant, to use generative AI in the process of drafting a bill.
‘In fact, the use of AI by
legislators is only likely to become more prevalent. There are currently
projects in the U.S. House, U.S. Senate, and legislatures
around the world to trial the use of AI in various ways: searching
databases, drafting text, summarizing meetings, performing policy research and
analysis, and more. A Brazilian municipality passed
the first known AI-written law in 2023’ (Nathan Sanders, Bruce Schneier, lawfaremedia.org;
many thanks to Dr Joseph Farrell for mentioning this article at his
web site).
The authors explain why
legislators are likely to adopt AI in their task of writing laws:
‘Congress may or may not be
up to the challenge of putting more policy details into law, but the external
forces outlined above—lobbyists, the judiciary, and an increasingly divided and
polarized government—are pushing them to do so. When Congress does take on the
task of writing complex legislation, it’s quite likely it will turn to AI for
help.
‘Two particular AI
capabilities enable Congress to write laws different from laws humans tend to
write. One, AI models have an enormous scope of expertise, whereas
people have only a handful of specializations. Large language models (LLMs)
like the one powering ChatGPT can generate legislative text on funding
specialty crop harvesting mechanization equally as well as material on energy
efficiency standards for street lighting. This enables a legislator to address
more topics simultaneously. Two, AI models have the sophistication to
work with a higher degree of complexity than people can. Modern LLM systems can
instantaneously perform several
simultaneous multistep reasoning tasks using information from thousands of
pages of documents. This enables a legislator to fill in more baroque detail on
any given topic.
‘ . . . AI can be used in
each step of lawmaking, and this will bring various benefits to policymakers.
It could let them work on more policies—more bills—at the same time, add more
detail and specificity to each bill, or interpret and incorporate
more feedback from constituents and outside groups. The addition of a
single AI tool to a legislative office may have an impact similar to adding
several people to their staff, but with far lower cost.
‘ . . . There’s more that AI
can do in the legislative process. AI can summarize bills and answer questions
about their provisions. It can highlight aspects of a bill that align with, or
are contrary to, different political points of view. We can even imagine a future
in which AI can be used to simulate a new law and determine whether or not it
would be effective, or what the side effects would be. This means that beyond
writing them, AI could help lawmakers understand laws. Congress is
notorious for producing bills hundreds of pages long, and many other countries
sometimes have similarly massive omnibus bills that address many issues at
once. It’s impossible for any one person to understand how each of these bills’
provisions would work. Many legislatures employ human analysis in budget or
fiscal offices that analyze these bills and offer reports. AI could do this
kind of work at greater speed and scale, so legislators could easily query an
AI tool about how a particular bill would affect their district or areas of
concern.’
We then come to an important
part of the authors’ essay – why this new development in governance is
necessary at all:
‘We should understand the
idea of AI-augmented lawmaking contextualized within the longer history of
legislative technologies. To serve society at modern scales, we’ve had to come
a long way from the Athenian ideals of direct democracy and sortition. Democracy
no longer involves just one person and one vote to decide a policy. It involves
hundreds of thousands of constituents electing one representative, who is
augmented by a staff as well as subsidized by lobbyists, and who implements
policy through a vast administrative state coordinated by digital technologies.
Using AI to help those representatives specify and refine their policy ideas is
part of a long history of transformation.’
In other words, because
society and government have become as complex as they have, lawmakers are
required to use AI simply to fulfil their duties in the new, convoluted techscape.
But this begs the
question: Is all of this complexity
necessary? Is it beneficial?
It would seem not. Just a glance at the toll that internet
message boards, social media, and similar things have had on people,
particularly the young – how they encourage the mutilation of language along
with insults, bullying, impoliteness, addiction, murder, suicide, and any
number of other evils – is proof enough that at least some of what modernity’s
unholy trinity of science-technology-industry (to use the Southern Agrarian
Wendell Berry’s words) has wrought ought to be rejected.
Miss Weil’s description of
factory life is also worthy of consideration in this context:
. . .
The rest is at https://www.geopolitika.ru/en/article/ai-and-inhuman-modern-state.
--
Holy
Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema
to the Union!