By Edo Segal
The column almost broke the argument I spent a year building.
Appiah writes "The Ethicist" for the *New York Times Magazine*. Every week, strangers send him their moral tangles — the friend who lied, the colleague who cheated, the inheritance that split a family. He reads them. He thinks. He responds from a position earned across seven decades of living between cultures, between continents, between the particular and the universal.
Then researchers fed the same dilemmas to GPT-4. Nine hundred evaluators rated the machine's answers as more moral, more trustworthy, more thoughtful than the philosopher's.
I sat with that result for a long time. If you have read *You On AI*, you know I believe AI is the most powerful amplifier
A reading-companion catalog of the 26 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Kwame Anthony Appiah — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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