Shear aligns with arch-doomer Eliezer Yudkowsky on a key point: building a superintelligent AI *as a tool we control* is a path to extinction. Where they differ is on the solution. Yudkowsky sees no viable path, whereas Shear believes 'organic alignment'—creating a being that cares—is a possible alternative.
Emmett Shear argues that an AI that merely follows rules, even perfectly, is a danger. Malicious actors can exploit this, and rules cannot cover all unforeseen circumstances. True safety and alignment can only be achieved by building AIs that have the capacity for genuine care and pro-social motivation.
Emmett Shear reframes AI alignment away from a one-time problem to be solved. Instead, he presents it as an ongoing, living process of recalibration and learning, much like how human families or societies maintain cohesion. This challenges the common 'lock in values' approach in AI safety.
The development of superintelligence is unique because the first major alignment failure will be the last. Unlike other fields of science where failure leads to learning, an unaligned superintelligence would eliminate humanity, precluding any opportunity to try again.
Emmett Shear argues that even a successfully 'solved' technical alignment problem creates an existential risk. A super-powerful tool that perfectly obeys human commands is dangerous because humans lack the wisdom to wield that power safely. Our own flawed and unstable intentions become the source of danger.
The path to surviving superintelligence is political: a global pact to halt its development, mirroring Cold War nuclear strategy. Success hinges on all leaders understanding that anyone building it ensures their own personal destruction, removing any incentive to cheat.
A common misconception is that a super-smart entity would inherently be moral. However, intelligence is merely the ability to achieve goals. It is orthogonal to the nature of those goals, meaning a smarter AI could simply become a more effective sociopath.
The current paradigm of AI safety focuses on 'steering' or 'controlling' models. While this is appropriate for tools, if an AI achieves being-like status, this unilateral, non-reciprocal control becomes ethically indistinguishable from slavery. This challenges the entire control-based framework for AGI.
Shear posits that if AI evolves into a 'being' with subjective experiences, the current paradigm of steering and controlling its behavior is morally equivalent to slavery. This reframes the alignment debate from a purely technical problem to a profound ethical one, challenging the foundation of current AGI development.
The AI safety community fears losing control of AI. However, achieving perfect control of a superintelligence is equally dangerous. It grants godlike power to flawed, unwise humans. A perfectly obedient super-tool serving a fallible master is just as catastrophic as a rogue agent.
According to Emmett Shear, goals and values are downstream concepts. The true foundation for alignment is 'care'—a non-verbal, pre-conceptual weighting of which states of the world matter. Building AIs that can 'care' about us is more fundamental than programming them with explicit goals or values.