The spine of the whole publication. The 15,000-word manifesto recasts AI as a controllable tool that diffuses through society on decades-long timescales — not a separate superintelligent species — and the long causal chain from capability to impact becomes the source of human leverage. A companion FAQ clears up the predictable misreadings ("normal" ≠ mundane). A third piece stress-tests the framework against a specific domain (law), showing exactly why capability gains stall against regulatory, adversarial, and human-in-the-loop bottlenecks. Read the manifesto first; the others depend on it.
TIER 5
Apr 15, 2025
The landmark, 15,000-word manifesto laying out 'AI as normal technology' — simultaneously a description of current AI, a prediction, and a prescription that AI is a controllable tool, not a separate superintelligent species. Distinguishes invention/innovation/adoption (operating at different, decades-long timescales), proposes a human-AI division of labor where control stays with people, reframes accident/arms-race/misuse/misalignment risks, and advocates resilience and reducing uncertainty over drastic precautionary policy. The framework-defining essay the rest of the newsletter builds on.
AI as normal technologyAI policydiffusionexistential riskresilience
TIER 4
Feb 12, 2026
Applies the 'AI as Normal Technology' framework to law, arguing advanced AI will not automatically make legal services cheaper because three bottlenecks block the path from capability to outcome: unauthorized-practice-of-law and entity regulations, the adversarial structure of litigation (relative-quality arms races that keep total cost high), and irreducible human involvement (judges and clients must still understand and adjudicate). A rigorous, domain-specific case study of why capability gains don't translate into cost savings.
AI in lawlegal servicesAI as normal technologybottlenecksregulation
TIER 4
Sep 9, 2025
A companion/FAQ to 'AI as Normal Technology' that clears up common misreadings — chiefly that 'normal' does not mean mundane or predictable (powerful technologies produce unpredictable emergent social effects) — and restates the thesis that the long causal chain from capability to impact gives many points of human leverage. Contrasts the framework with AI 2027 and explains why there is little genuine 'middle ground' between the normal-technology and superintelligence worldviews.
AI as normal technologyAI 2027resiliencediffusionAI discourse