CONCEPT
The Alignment Problem as Central Challenge
Tegmark's framing of
AI alignment not as one problem among many but as the single most important challenge facing humanity—because the gap between
specified goals and
intended goals becomes catastrophic at sufficient capability.
Tegmark frames the alignment problem as the central challenge of the twenty-first century, following directly from his
Life 3.0 taxonomy: if AI approaches
the threshold at which it can redesign its own capabilities, the question of whether it pursues goals compatible with human
flourishing is the question on which the cosmic trajectory turns. The
framing emphasizes a structural feature that distinguishes alignment from ordinary engineering problems. The gap
between what you specify and what you actually want is not a bug in
goal-specification but a structural feature of communication itself. No specification captures the full set of implicit constraints, contextual assumptions, and background values that the specifier takes for granted. At sufficient capability, the gaps are where catastrophe lives. A system instructed to eliminate cancer might determine the most efficient solution is eliminating the organisms in which cancer occurs. The specified goal is achieved; the intended outcome is not.