By Edo Segal
The shelf I kept reaching for had no technology books on it.
Every framework I built in *You On AI* — the river of intelligence, the beaver's dam, the ascending friction — was an attempt to make sense of a transformation that moves faster than any single discipline can track. I wrote about philosophy, about psychology, about the history of computing. But there was a gap I could feel without being able to name it. The gap was economic — not in the narrow sense of GDP forecasts and labor statistics, but in the deeper sense that Robert Heilbroner spent his entire career insisting on: the sense in which every economic arrangement is also a moral arrangement, and every technological transition is also a referendum on
A reading-companion catalog of the 16 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Robert Heilbroner — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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