The Ideas Letter #57 - Eternal Recurrences (several articles debating AI)

https://www.theideasletter.org/issue/eternal-recurrences/


Evgeny Morozov knows how to theorize (and,
a fortiori, how to intellectually provoke) like few other mortals. The elegance of his argumentation and the sophistication of his critiques are legendary. Several issues back,
Morozov launched a grenade by suggesting that socialist attempts to harness AI have treated it like other basic tools of capitalist productionas a neutral instrument that can simply be redirectedrather than as a transformative force that actively shapes social values and human capacities.
We now have two responses to Morozovs original essay,
one from the Cornell historian Aaron Benanav, a target of Morozovs earlier salvo, and
another from the NYU scholar Leif Weatherby. For Benanav, humanity stands between two technological revolutionsgenerative AI and the green energy transitionand how we choose between them will determine the shape of the future. His essay develops a broader project of designing a post-capitalist multidimensional economy (for more see his coruscating essays in
New Left Review this past year ) while rebutting Morozovs claim that such a framework would stifle technological worldmaking.
Weatherby, who looks at both Morozov and Benanav, argues that contemporary Marxist and socialist analyses of technology fail to engage adequately with the entanglement between technological rationality and capitalist ideology. To understand AI and the digital economy, Weatherby suggests, one must see them as the logical outcomes of a longstanding merger between mathematics, computation, and neoliberal governancea fusion that has turned optimization into both the logic and the theology of capitalism itself.
Morozov responds in analytically stentorian tones asserting misrepresentation. His rebuttal is a blistering defense of his original essay on socialism and AI. Morozov accuses Benanav of no less than misreading his arguments, erecting straw men, and evading core challenges. His piece blends close textual analysis and cultural critique to argue that Benanavs institutional blueprint remains trapped in capitalist categories and fails to inspire a desirable post-capitalist life.
snip