PERSON
Reid Hoffman
The networked optimist who built LinkedIn, coined blitzscaling, and staked his career on the wager that widely distributed AI capability is the most humane and democratically defensible path through the transition.
Reid Hoffman is the philosopher-practitioner of the network age — a Stanford Symbolic Systems alumnus and Oxford-trained Wittgenstein reader who co-founded LinkedIn, helped build PayPal, and then turned both institutional and intellectual capital toward the AI frontier. His ideas arrive as a system, not a slogan:
blitzscaling, the deliberate prioritization of speed over efficiency in winner-take-most markets;
permanent beta, the posture that a career — and in the AI era, personhood itself — should be managed like a software product perpetually in revision; the
tour-of-duty reframing of employment as an honest, time-bounded alliance rather than a fiction of permanence; and, most recently,
superagency, the argument that widely accessible AI gives every person the cognitive leverage that was once the privilege of teams and institutions. He calls this political philosophy
techno-humanism: neither the alarm of the doomers nor the abdication of the accelerationists, but a compass that orients every AI decision by asking whether the result expands or contracts what humans can