Nicholas A. Christakis offers a unique perspective on artificial intelligence (AI) by likening it to human culture. He emphasizes the following points:
1. Culture as Artificial Intelligence: Christakis sees culture as a form of artificial intelligence that exists outside individual minds but is created, shaped, and transmitted by humans. Like AI, culture can solve problems, apply logic, have a memory, and influence human behavior.
2. Coevolution of Biology and Culture: Christakis suggests that human biology and culture are deeply intertwined and have coevolved. Our genes shape our culture, and culture, in turn, shapes our genes. This mutual influence has led to the complex relationship between humans and culture.
3. AI and Other Examples of Collective Ideation: The author highlights that humans and some animal species exhibit forms of thought outside individual minds. This includes collective problem-solving in insect and bird groups, cultural behaviors in animals, and even experiments that manipulate behaviors to create simple computer circuits using animals.
4. Love/Hate Relationship with Culture: Christakis points out that humans have a complex relationship with culture, fearing its potential for manipulation (e.g., religious fundamentalism or fascism) while also valuing its ability to foster collective action and make life easier. Similarly, our relationship with advanced AI may involve awe and concern.
5. Coevolution with AI: Christakis suggests that the coevolutionary model observed between genes and culture could serve as a model for how humans and thinking machines may interact over centuries, mutually influencing and coevolving with each other.
Overall, Christakis views AI with a sense of awe and respect, akin to how he regards human culture. He does not express undue fear of AI but emphasizes the importance of understanding its potential impact on society and human culture.