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Zheng Yongnian

The Chinese political scientist who made the civilizational stakes of AI governance legible—arguing that the frameworks dominating the global discourse are not neutral but culturally specific, and that a world governed by Western AI ethics alone is a world in which one civilization’s self-understanding is being embedded, at scale, into every other civilization’s social fabric.
Zheng Yongnian is the political scientist who names what the global AI governance discourse cannot ask: whose civilization is being governed? The dominant frameworks of AI ethics—fairness, transparency, accountability, individual rights—present themselves as universal, but they emerged from particular laboratories, legal traditions, and intellectual histories. Zheng’s scholarship on the Chinese state and civilizational governance argues that applying these frameworks to a civilization organized on different premises is not a helpful universalism; it is a form of intellectual colonialism that distorts the very phenomenon it claims to analyze. His concept of the civilizational state—a political institution whose legitimacy rests not on procedural mandate but on the capacity to maintain the conditions for social harmony across millennia—reframes Chinese AI governance not as authoritarian deviation from liberal norms but as a different institutional logic pursuing a different conception of the public good. His 2025 paper on “social order in the age of artificial intelligence” introduced the concept of artificial ignorance—the progressive de-intellectualization of a population that outsources its thinking to AI systems—as a civilizational emergency: not a pedagogical problem but a threat to the cognitive infrastructure on which social order depends. Zheng is not a relativist; he argues that different civilizational contexts require different governance frameworks, not that all frameworks are equivalent. His deepest claim is that the question of what kind of civilization one wants to be cannot be answered by borrowed categories—and that AI is arriving precisely when civilizations most need to answer it for themselves.
Zheng Yongnian
Zheng Yongnian

In the [YOU] on AI Field Guide

[YOU] on AI describes the orange pill as the moment when a person genuinely sees what AI is doing to the structure of cognition, expertise, and civilization’s self-reproduction. Zheng’s contribution to the cycle is to take that pill at the civilizational level and report what is visible from the other side. What he sees is a technology that does not merely disrupt existing institutions but actively reshapes the civilizational conditions under which those institutions operate—and that, because AI systems are trained on and optimized for particular cultural assumptions, the reshaping is not neutral. A civilization that governs AI with borrowed frameworks is not protecting its own values; it is allowing a technology designed elsewhere to overwrite them.

His argument that American AI development resembles a powerful engine without adequate brakes—prodigious frontier capabilities, weak governance—while Chinese AI development resembles an engine with brakes but insufficient horsepower, situates the Sino-American AI competition not as a race to the same finish line but as two asymmetric civilizational experiments that the world will learn from in different ways. The cycle’s insistence that AI is an amplifier whose quality depends on the quality of what is amplified finds its civilizational extension in Zheng: the amplifier will amplify the values embedded in its design, and those values belong to the civilization that built it.

Civilizational Individuation
Civilizational Individuation

He is the cycle’s most important interlocutor on the non-Western stakes of AI governance, and his framework complements the individual-level analyses of Yuval Noah Harari and the attentional-ecology work of Yves Citton by operating at the level where those analyses converge: the question of what kind of civilization—not just what kind of individual—can survive the AI transition with its self-understanding intact.

Origin

Zheng Yongnian was born in Zhejiang province and trained in political science in China before receiving his doctorate from Princeton. He has been a professor at the National University of Singapore and is currently founding director of the Advanced Institute for Global and Contemporary China Studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen. His scholarly reputation rests on his analysis of the Chinese Communist Party as an organizational institution with deep continuity with the imperial tradition—a structural observation that resisted the dominant Western frame of China as a failed liberal democracy in progress.

His 2010 analysis of the Chinese state, The Chinese Communist Party as Organizational Emperor, established his signature analytical move: understanding Chinese institutions on their own terms rather than as deviations from Western models. Technological Empowerment (2008) applied this lens to the internet in China, arguing that the state was not merely censoring the internet but co-evolving with it—shaping what the internet became within the Chinese civilizational context in ways that Western platform analysis systematically missed.

His engagement with AI governance began in earnest around 2024–2025, culminating in a paper in the Bulletin of the Chinese Academy of Sciences that identified the structural characteristics of AI systems—highly concentrated capabilities, centralized control, monopolized deployment, diffused users—as inherently dangerous governance problems requiring a civilizational-level response. His concept of artificial ignorance as the AI-era counterpart to previous industrial revolutions’ liberation of physical labor introduced a distinctive contribution: not merely that AI displaces workers, but that it displaces the cognitive activity on which social order depends.

Key Ideas

The civilizational state. China is not a strong version of a familiar state type but a different type entirely: a civilizational state whose claim to legitimacy rests on performance—the capacity to deliver stability, prosperity, and good governance in the Confucian sense—rather than on procedural mandate. This framing transforms the analysis of Chinese AI governance: the state intervenes not because it is uniquely controlling but because its legitimation logic requires intervention when a technology produces outcomes that damage social order. The performance-based state must govern for outcomes; it cannot satisfy its mandate by following the correct procedure while society deteriorates.

Against intellectual colonialism in AI ethics. The dominant AI ethics frameworks emerged from particular cultural contexts and are not portable without distortion. An AI ethics built on individual rights, transparency to individuals, and markets as the primary allocation mechanism reflects the liberal-democratic tradition and is not adequate to governance in a Confucian civilizational context that begins from the relational self, social harmony, and state capacity as the condition of civilization rather than its threat. Applying Western frameworks to non-Western governance is not universal ethics; it is the imposition of one civilization’s self-understanding on another’s self-organization.

Artificial ignorance and de-intellectualization. The three previous industrial revolutions liberated humans from physical and routine cognitive labor, expanding the scope for thinking. AI may for the first time liberate humans from intellectual labor itself, producing what Zheng calls artificial ignorance: not individual stupidity but collective de-intellectualization, the progressive atrophy of the cognitive capacities that a social order requires for its own reproduction. A society that outsources its thinking cannot govern the technology it has outsourced to—and a social order that cannot think cannot sustain itself.

Civilizational Intelligence
Civilizational Intelligence

The pastoral society model. Zheng’s evocative term for the AI-enabled governance dynamic in which a small number of entities—platform companies, state agencies—play the role of the shepherd, organizing the movement of a passive human population that has surrendered its navigational capacity to the herder. The metaphor names a structural dependency: when cognitive navigation is concentrated in one entity and a large population becomes habituated to relying on it, the distributed navigational capacity atrophies, and the population loses not just the practice but the faculty of finding its own way.

The multipolar AI world. Sino-American AI competition is not a race to the same finish line but a contest between two civilizational traditions with different strengths: American AI as an engine without adequate brakes (frontier capability, weak governance), Chinese AI as an engine with brakes but insufficient horsepower (governance capacity, constrained frontier). The outcome that serves the world is not the dominance of either model but a multipolar AI governance architecture adequate to the diversity of civilizational traditions—one that requires, as its precondition, each tradition doing the difficult work of civilizational self-examination rather than borrowing frameworks developed elsewhere.

Debates & Critiques

Zheng’s framework attracts challenges from two directions. Critics of his civilizational-state account argue that it can function as sophisticated apologetics for authoritarian governance: by insisting that Chinese AI governance must be evaluated by internal Confucian standards rather than universal human rights norms, the framework risks providing intellectual cover for practices that cause real harm to real people regardless of which civilizational tradition they occur within. Zheng explicitly disclaims relativism, but his critics press the distinction between relativism and the structural effect of his analysis: a framework that brackets universal human rights as culturally specific may not endorse their violation, but it weakens the grounds for objecting to it. From the other direction, scholars of Confucian political thought have questioned whether Zheng’s invocation of the tradition is sufficiently engaged with its internal diversity—whether the Confucian emphasis on remonstrance, moral criticism of power, and the people’s welfare as the test of legitimate governance provides more resources for accountability than his framework allows. The deepest open question his work leaves is whether the civilizational self-examination he calls for can occur under the institutional conditions of a state whose legitimation logic discourages the kind of genuine public deliberation that self-examination requires. Harari’s analysis of how AI enables concentration of power, and the Confucian tradition’s own resources for checking power, are both relevant here—and both point toward questions that Zheng’s framework raises more clearly than it answers.

The Civilizational Governance Triad

Zheng’s three-part framework for adequate AI governance
The Diagnosis
Civilizational Specificity
Governance frameworks are not neutral; they embed the civilizational assumptions of the contexts that produced them. The liberal AI ethics discourse—individual rights, transparency, market allocation—is not universal but particular, and its application to non-Western contexts actively distorts the governance it claims to enable. Adequate governance requires frameworks adequate to the civilization being governed.
The Warning
Artificial Ignorance
AI may be liberating humans from intellectual labor in the same movement that earlier revolutions liberated them from physical labor—with the difference that the cognitive capacity at risk is the precondition of social order itself. Artificial ignorance is not individual underperformance but civilizational de-intellectualization: the atrophy of the thinking that makes governance possible.
The Imperative
Civilizational Self-Examination
The question of what kind of civilization one wants to be cannot be borrowed from another tradition’s self-understanding. Every civilization must ask the question through its own intellectual resources, evaluating the answers by its own standards. AI is arriving precisely when this question is most urgent and least asked—which is the deepest governance failure of the present moment.

Further Reading

  1. Zheng Yongnian, “Social Order in the Age of Artificial Intelligence,” Bulletin of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (2025)
  2. Zheng Yongnian, Technological Empowerment: The Internet, State, and Society in China (Stanford University Press, 2008)
  3. Zheng Yongnian, The Chinese Communist Party as Organizational Emperor (Routledge, 2010)
  4. Zheng Yongnian, Contemporary China: A History since 1978 (Wiley-Blackwell, 2014)
  5. Daniel A. Bell, The China Model: Political Meritocracy and the Limits of Democracy (Princeton University Press, 2015)
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