
LLMs Have Plateaued. Now we can finally figure out what to do!
The most intimidating thing about thinking about technology, whether as an academic, a policy maker or just as a human being trying to imagine the next five years without collapsing into a puddle of anxiety, is the fast pace at which it seems to move. Emergent technology makes us feel the future as something over which we have no control, that is difficult to understand, and that is catastrophically disruptive to our society, opening the door to the unfamiliar and the dangerous. This is not false, but is only ever going to lead to emotional paralysis. Particularly for philosophy, the slowest mode of thought, whose owl only flies at dusk, it feels impossible to find secure footing for analysis and critique.1 We stand instead on intellectual quicksand, the more we twist and turn the deeper we sink. Why even bother thinking about this new technology? Whatever we come up with will be obsolete by tomorrow? ...