PERSON
Neal Stephenson
The novelist and essayist whose fictional models of technological transition—from the Metaverse to the Young Lady's Illustrated Primer to the Baroque interregnum—constitute the most rigorous available guide to the institutional dynamics of the AI moment.
Neal Stephenson is the novelist as systems analyst. Over three decades he constructed, in fiction, the most technically precise laboratory for thinking about capability explosions and the institutional destruction they produce: a virtual world whose satire became a product roadmap; an AI educational device that anticipated the essential dilemma of every AI tutor deployed today; a three-volume history of the last time civilization rebuilt its institutional order from scratch after a technological revolution. His 2025 essay “Remarks on AI from NZ” distilled these fictional arguments into a direct framework: an
ecological model that insists AI is not one thing but a diverse population of non-human intelligences, each requiring species-specific analysis; an
augmentation-amputation account drawn from
McLuhan that explains why the students using ChatGPT for everything are learning nothing; and a historical frame drawn from the Baroque Cycle that locates the present AI transition within the recurring pattern by which capability explosions produce
institutional voids before the painful, decades-long construction of new