By Edo Segal
Hannah Arendt wrote The Human Condition in 1958 to understand what we are doing when we are active in the world. She distinguished three fundamental activities: labor, which sustains biological life but leaves no permanent trace; work, which fabricates the durable world of objects; and action, which reveals who we are through unpredictable new beginnings.
I did not expect a political philosopher who died in 1975 to illuminate the AI revolution. But here we are.
The senior engineer in my Trivandrum office who discovered that eighty percent of his work vanished when Claude arrived, leaving behind twenty percent that was "everything" – he was living through what Arendt would call an unveiling. The mechanical labor that had consumed his career was stripped away, revealing either genuine capacity
A reading-companion catalog of the 38 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Hannah Arendt — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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