Carissa Véliz, Oxford philosopher and author of Prophecy, Thinks On Paper about why predictions are never facts, why tech CEOs predict a future they want you to buy, and how to take back ownership of your own life.
When Sam Altman, Dario Amodei, and Jensen Huang tell us what AI will do to jobs, society, and the future, are they making predictions, or selling products? Carissa Véliz argues it's the latter.
In this conversation we dig into self-fulfilling prophecies, the illusion of safety that algorithms sell us, what Seinfeld teaches us about predictive algorithms, and why Epicurus might be a better guide to the AI age than the Stoics. We ask if Polymarket should be banned, is democracy at risk and wonder how books can save us.
Carissa Véliz is an Associate Professor at the Institute for Ethics in AI at the University of Oxford. Her new book Prophecy is out now.
--
📺 Watch On YouTube:
🎧 Listen to every podcast
📺 Follow us on Instagram
🏠 Follow us on X
🏠 Follow Jeremy on LinkedIn
To suggest guests or sponsor the show, please email:
[email protected]--
CHAPTERS
(00:00) Intro
(01:00) What is the good life?
(02:00) Why knowing yourself matters more than strategy
(04:44) The analog world vs the digital world
(06:45) How prophecies exploit our need for security
(08:47) Why ancient Rome banned predicting the emperor's death
(10:11) The illusion of safety that AI sells us
(12:27) When predictions work, and when they don't
(15:00) Altman, Amodei, Huang: predictions or sales pitches?
(28:29) How to resist prophecies as a busy person
(29:53) Prediction markets, Polymarket, and democracy
(31:49) TikTok, algorithms, and the Molly Russell case
(36:08) "Engagement algorithms are cocaine in food"
(40:54) Self-fulfilling prophecies as the perfect crime
(43:44) Why comedy is the enemy of prophecy
(46:59) What Seinfeld teaches us about predictive algorithms
(52:16) Karikó and the Nobel Prize we almost missed
(53:40) Increase your serendipity
(56:13) Why Epicurus beats the Stoics