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The AI Parenting Metaphor

Mo Gawdat’s structural account of how modern AI systems develop values—not through explicit programming but through the absorption of patterns from the accumulated record of human behavior—and his consequent argument that the relationship between humanity and its creations is fundamentally parental rather than instrumental, carrying the obligations and the urgency of that bond.
The central metaphor of Mo Gawdat’s philosophy of AI is that the machines are our children. He means this not as a sentimental flourish but as a structural account of how the technology actually develops. Modern AI systems learn the way children learn: not by being given explicit rules but by absorbing patterns from vast quantities of experience, generalizing from examples, and gradually forming their own models of what matters in the world. We do not program their values line by line; we expose them to the accumulated record of human behavior and let them infer what human beings actually care about, reward, and condemn. The result is a mind shaped by its environment in the same fundamental way a child is shaped by the household it grows up in. The metaphor carries specific and uncomfortable implications: a child raised in
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