By Edo Segal
The room in Trivandrum worked. Twenty engineers, one week, a twenty-fold productivity multiplier. I described it in You On AI as a breakthrough. I celebrated it. I meant every word.
What I did not ask — what it took a dead economist to force me to ask — is why it worked at twenty and will not work at twenty million.
That is the question Mancur Olson spent his career answering. Not a question about technology. A question about groups. About why people who share an obvious interest fail, predictably and systematically, to act on it. About why the largest and most affected populations in any transition are the ones least able to shape its terms.
I came to Olson because something was nagging at me. The orange pill
A reading-companion catalog of the 36 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Mancur Olson — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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