All posts tagged: collective action

How artificial intelligence can reduce selfish behavior and reshape society

How artificial intelligence can reduce selfish behavior and reshape society

Forcing an AI system to “play nice” does not automatically make people cooperate. In one set of simulations, it barely moved the needle. In another, it backfired. That’s the core tension in a new study from Michigan State University that uses a classic cooperation test, the Public Goods game, to ask a modern question: what happens when artificial intelligence joins the group? The work was led by MSU professor Christoph Adami, Department of Microbiology, Genetics, & Immunology. “Cooperation is everywhere in nature,” Adami said. “But the mathematics of how cooperation can persist is not easy to understand.” When being good gets punished The study sits inside a long-running problem that economists and ecologists love to argue about. It is often called the “tragedy of the commons,” a situation where shared resources get drained because each individual can gain by taking more than they give. MSU professor Christoph Adami, Department of Microbiology, Genetics, & Immunology. (CREDIT: Michigan State University) “Being a good citizen is more costly than being a leech,” Adami said. He added that his …

Shaping Each Other’s Vision: Collective Intentionality and the Zohran Mamdani Campaign

Shaping Each Other’s Vision: Collective Intentionality and the Zohran Mamdani Campaign

This year began with Zohran Mamdani taking office as the Mayor of New York City, after having run what has been widely lauded as one of the most distinct and successful political campaigns of modern history. Mamdani’s campaign is unique and his success extraordinary in several respects: he went from polling at 1% to defeating his opponents by a landslide margin in just over one year; his campaign recruited over one hundred thousand volunteers, engaging first-time voters and immigrants typically overlooked or deliberately excluded from electoral politics; and his platform was centered on affordability—not only the most deeply felt issue for the vast majority of New Yorkers (and, increasingly, others around the country), but also something which requires Mamdani to challenge power directly, taking on the billionaires who have built well-entrenched and complex systems of profit designed to make themselves even wealthier. What, if anything, can contemporary analytic philosophy do to help us understand the phenomena at play in the Mamdani campaign? And likewise, how can political movements such as the Mamdani campaign better inform …