Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Why big AI labs are hiring so many philosophers

 Claude (deontological) essentially has a different set of ethics than ChatGPT and Gemini (consequentialism).

Also: "In 2024 ... 7% of those who had studied computer science were unemployed, against just 5.1% of philosophers."

36 years ago there was no Microsoft and GitHub Copilot to ask  the AI to compare the Correspondence TheoryCoherence Theory, and Pragmatic Theory of truth…

  

Why big AI labs are hiring so many philosophers

The technology presents all sorts of thorny problems—a philosopher’s favourite kind 

Ten years ago, as the ai revolution was gathering pace, arts and humanities students were told that, if they wanted to make themselves employable, they should “learn to code”. That may have been bad advice. These days, it is programmers who are nervous about ai taking their jobs.
They might consider learning to philosophise. Earlier this year the Federal Reserve Bank of New York published figures showing that American philosophy graduates are more likely to have jobs than their peers who studied computer science. In 2024, the most recent year for which numbers are available, 7% of those who had studied computer science were unemployed, against just 5.1% of philosophers.
Many are being snapped up by ai firms themselves. Students get job offers before they have graduated, says Luciano Floridi, a philosopher at Yale University. Academics are moving, too. Dr Floridi describes the scale of departures from philosophy departments as a “haemorrhaging”.
Some of the lessons that philosophy can offer ai researchers are ancient. The Socratic method—as described by Plato, an ancient Greek philosopher—uses feigned ignorance and sequential questioning to clarify meanings, spot contradictions and reveal ramifications. Many current aisystems tend towards sycophancy. Models trained in the Socratic method, says Jörg Noller, an expert on philosophy and ai at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, are less keen on people-pleasing and more willing to pursue the truth.
Then there is the idea of “Socratic ignorance”. In the “Apology”, Plato has Socrates claim that his wisdom consists mostly of being aware of how much he does not know. Implanting that humility into a model can help limit overconfidence, a common flaw that Dr Noller describes as “ai immaturity”. Iason Gabriel, a senior philosopher at Google DeepMind, an ai lab based in London, attributes an industry-wide decline in hallucinations to such efforts. More broadly, he says, philosophy lessons are “a powerful mechanism” for improving long ai reasoning processes known as “chains of thought”.
Philosophical training can also affect a model’s outlook in more specific ways. Feed an ai legal assistant the writings of John Locke, says Thomas Powers, a philosopher of technology at the University of Delaware, and it will favour robust property rights as an underpinning of political liberty. And if you don’t like those principles, the model-makers have others. The “Granite” series of models from ibm, an American computing giant, come with dials that let business customers better align outputs with their own corporate philosophies. Francesca Rossi, ibm’s head of responsible ai, says these can let users choose where to strike the balance between philosophical trade-offs, such individual agency versus social harmony.
Philosophy can help with safety, too. Researchers have documented all sorts of ominous behaviour in ai models, including attempts to evade oversight and even blackmail their users. One way model-makers try to discourage this sort of misbehaviour is called ai constitutionalism. This involves building a model around a scaffolding of rules and principles culled from philosophical writings with legal or moral authority.
Anthropic, an ai lab based in San Francisco, is one proponent. Constitutions for its Claude models have incorporated material from sources as diverse as Immanuel Kant, Apple’s terms of service and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The latest iteration, led by Anthropic’s top philosopher, Amanda Askell, was published on January 21st. Some staff at Anthropic have nicknamed the 78-page constitution Claude’s “soul doc”.
The biggest question, though, is what sorts of rules should be put in those constitutions in the first place. Philosophers have zeroed in on two main ethical frameworks. One is deontology. Popular with Kant, among others, this imposes strict rules that prohibit things like lying, coercion and treating people as a means rather than an end, even if it is for a greater good. Anthropic’s constitution incorporates many deontological strictures. These can make ai behaviour more consistent, says Dr Powers—a plus for deploying robots in homes and public spaces.
Models with a deontological take on the world have other benefits. One is greater honesty, a trait widely noted in Claude. Models that are more truthful, says Nick Bostrom, a philosopher at the University of Oxford, are less likely to mislead their users. Inflection ai, another Silicon Valley lab, imposes deontological constraints onto its Pi chatbot, which is designed to provide emotional support. Sean White, its boss, says Pi is good at spotting users at risk of harming themselves or others. Deontological constitutions also help with legal compliance, says Dr Floridi. 
The other approach to ethics of interest to philosophers of aiis called consequentialism. It weighs costs against benefits to decide what to do. Models more sympathetic to consequentialism include OpenAI’s Chatgpt and Google’s Gemini. Google’s ai models are designed to produce “likely overall benefits [that] substantially outweigh the foreseeable risks”, a classic consequentialist goal.
Consequentialist algorithms are also crucial in software for autonomous vehicles: if an accident is unavoidable, a decision must be made on the least tragic way to crash. Chris Gerdes, a senior engineer at Waymo, which makes self-driving cars, says the trend is to make driving software more consequentialist. Consequentialism is also central to ai weapon systems. Military objectives must be weighed against possible civilian deaths, says Jack Shanahan, a former head of the Joint Artificial Intelligence Centre, which studies ai for America’s armed forces.
Thorny problems abound—a philosopher’s favourite sort. Are there cases when deontological rules should be overridden? How do you make decisions when the consequences are unclear? Should ai systems take into account animal welfare, or the state of the environment? Would it be morally acceptable, asks Stefan Heck, a philosopher and the boss of Nauto, which makes ai-powered safety systems for lorries and other commercial vehicles, to prioritise young pedestrians over old ones? He predicts ethically fraught lawsuits: consequentialist algorithms, after all, explicitly permit one harm as long as it is designed to avert a worse one.
Critics fret about “moral deskilling”: if computers increasingly make ethical calls, might people become less willing to make their own judgments? Roman Yampolskiy, an ai theoretician at the University of Louisville, argues that morality “is historically unstable, culturally variable, strategically manipulable, and often only retrospectively legible”. Unemployed coders take note: there seems to be no shortage of work for philosophers of ai

As the Tide Turns Against Putin, Beware the Drowning Man

 

Like a struggling swimmer, he may take desperate measures to stay afloat.

These are tricky times for Russian President Vladimir Putin. The “special military operation” he launched against Ukraine in 2022, intended to last a few days until a puppet regime in Kyiv could be installed, has now gone on longer than both the Soviet fight against Nazi Germany and all of World War I. His forces have long ceased making significant gains on the battlefield; some data even suggest that Russian forces lost territory in April and May. What gains the Russians have made have come at enormous cost: Last month, Anna Keast-Butler, the director of British intelligence agency GCHQ, cited new intelligenceindicating that Russian war deaths had likely reached almost half a million; various Western sources put total Russian casualties at significantly more than 1 million.

In relative terms, the attrition losses are even more staggering. By some accounts, Russia is now incurring eight men killed or seriously wounded for every one lost by Ukraine. With average monthly casualties running at more than 30,000 this year, the Russian army is struggling to replace them with fresh recruits. It is offering sign-up bonuses as high as $80,000, and up to $140,000 in debt relief to encourage more men to enlist.

Monday, June 29, 2026

Palantir. IT’S WORSE Than You Think

It is camera day today so it was great to be u nas with a birthday 🎊 boy who is also a photographer 📸


Guernica was painted by Picasso in 1937 in response to the Nazi's blitzkrieg on that town that killed or wounded 1/3 of the city's citizens. It's said during WWII, a Nazi officer, saw a photo of Guernica in Picasso's Paris apartment, and asked "Did you do that?" Picasso replied, "No. You did."



Great piece by Ta-Nehisi Coates on how “the portrait of America as an imperial power cuts against its self-image as a righteous cradle of democracy” and what that means for the next Black president.


he 40 Most Rage-Inducing Problems in Tech. Like: “4. Please, please stop asking me to verify my humanity by clicking on tiny motorcycles.” and “35. To Mark Zuckerberg, specifically: Shut up about the Roman Empire.”


Palantir. IT’S WORSE Than You Think Double Down News

Who’s next in Donald Trump’s campaign of retribution?

Who’s next in Donald Trump’s campaign of retribution? 
A number of US lawmakers and officials are being investigated by the justice department 

By Ella Lee in Washington

 

John Bolton, Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, became the first scalp in the US president’s campaign of legal vengeance on Friday, pleading guilty to mishandling classified information. 
The president has a long list of critics that he is pursuing during his second term. To exact his retribution, he and his acting attorney-general Todd Blanche have deployed an array of tactics, from criminal investigations to electoral oustings.
He has accused his predecessors Joe Biden and Barack Obama, and Bill and Hillary Clinton, of crimes and has revoked some of their security clearances. Republicans involved in investigating the January 6 2021 Capitol attack, such as former representatives Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger, have had their clearances removed as well.
The sweep of the retribution campaign has targeted other critics — among them some of the nation’s top law firms, who have lost government contracts and had their security clearances removed. Trump has also pushed out one-time Maga coalition allies who opposed his policies, or failed to support them robustly enough, by backing their opponents in primaries.
Dozens of others could face charges if the Department of Justice acts on Trump’s claims. Who else is in the crosshairs?

Under indictment

John Bolton

The DoJ in October indicted Bolton, who Trump has described as a “dirty guy”, on a total of 18 counts relating to the handling of sensitive information. A plea deal reduced this to a single count in exchange for a guilty plea. The former national security adviser will also pay a fine, is committed to community service and could face a prison sentence of up to 10 years, though the government agreed to seek a term of no more than five years.
Bolton became an outspoken critic of the president after leaving his first administration in 2019. In a book published in 2020 he accused Trump of using foreign policy as a tool to help him win re-election. 
Trump told reporters on Air Force One this month that his former adviser “wanted to go to war with anybody that opened their mouth” and was not a “smart person”.
The guilty verdict is the first — and so far only — victory in the president’s campaign of vengeance against his erstwhile enemies.

James Comey 

Trump’s feud with his former FBI director spans nearly a decade. In 2017 the president fired Comey, hinting that it was over his investigation into allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 election.
In 2018, Comey published a memoir that described Trump as “untethered to the truth”, while the president has claimed the former FBI head should face charges for “treason” and accused him of being a liar. 
The DoJ has twice sought to bring charges against Comey during Trump’s second term. He was charged in April over a social media post of a photo of seashells displaying the message “86 47”, which prosecutors said amounted to a threat on Trump’s life. “‘86’, it’s a mob term for ‘kill him’,” Trump, who is the 47th president, told reporters in the Oval Office.
Comey is expected to enter a plea in September, and his trial could begin the following month if the case is not dismissed.
The other charges against Comey were tied to 2020 congressional testimony but were dismissed after the court ruled that Trump’s handpicked prosecutor had been unlawfully appointed. Comey’s daughter, Maurene, a former New York federal prosecutor, blames her firing last year on her father’s conflict with the president.

Under investigation

The DoJ is probing several Democratic lawmakers and officials who have butted heads with Trump.

Lisa Cook

Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook is under investigation for alleged mortgage fraud, which she denies.
In Trump’s termination letter to Cook, he called her conduct “deceitful and potentially criminal”. Her firing came as Trump pressured the Fed to lower interest rates.
She was accused by housing regulator Bill Pulte, whom Trump has tapped as acting director of national intelligence, of listing properties in both Michigan and Georgia as primary residences to obtain favourable loan terms. 
Her case is now before the US Supreme Court, which is expected to rule this summer. Pulte said last month he believes she will be indicted, “no matter what the Supreme Court does”.

Adam Schiff

Adam Schiff, a California US senator, led the first impeachment of Trump by Democrats in the House of Representatives in 2019. “Adam ‘Shifty’ Schiff is guilty of crimes against our Country!!!”, the president wrote on Truth Social in December. 
Schiff is also under investigation for alleged mortgage fraud, which he denies. Schiff has said the charges amount to an effort to intimidate him, calling the investigation “the kind of stuff you see tinpot dictators do”.

John Brennan

Former CIA director John Brennan has for years faced attacks from Trump, who has called him a “loudmouth, partisan, political hack” and “easily the WORST” director in history. 
Brennan has accused Trump of being “drunk on power” and suggested that the US constitution’s 25th Amendment, which lays out how a president can be involuntarily removed from office, was “written with Donald Trump in mind”. 
Brennan faces two criminal probes, the first tied to allegations that he lied to Congress. The second is a sprawling “grand conspiracy” investigation into whether officials in the Obama and Biden administrations conspired to keep Trump out of the White House, which the president has long claimed. The investigation was revealed by FBI director Kash Patel in an interview with the podcaster Joe Rogan last summer.

Fani Willis

Fani Willis, the district attorney in Fulton County, Georgia, investigated and indicted Trump on charges of attempting to overturn the state’s 2020 election results. Trump dubbed her “Phoney Fani” and said she was a criminal after the case was thrown out of court due to her undisclosed relationship with a special prosecutor. 
She is reportedly under federal investigation over a trip she took to the Bahamas for leadership training. Willis’s office and the federal prosecuting office in Atlanta declined to comment.

Eric Swalwell

California Democratic congressman Eric Swalwell helped lead the second impeachment of Trump over his role in the January 6, 2021 attack on the US Capitol. He also filed a lawsuit against the president over the riot.
Pulte referred mortgage fraud allegations against Swalwell to the DoJ last year. He has denied any wrongdoing and sued over the investigation but later dropped the case.
Swalwell is also under federal investigation for allegations of sexual misconduct, which he has denied. After the allegations were revealed, Trump told the Daily Mail that Swalwell was a “sleazebag” and a “bad guy”, though he denied knowing anything about the charges. 

Gavin Newsom

California governor Gavin Newsom says he is the latest name on Trump’s “hit list” as the Department of Justice investigates him and his wife.
Newsom, who Trump frequently refers to as “Newscum”, has become a figure of resistance against the president, trolling him on social media by mirroring his use of all-caps text and AI images.
“They have not found a crime — they are simply trying to find one,” Newsom, a potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate, wrote on X
A person familiar with the investigations said several probes have been under way for roughly a year in the Eastern District of California. One is related to Newsom’s wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, and her tax affairs, while another is related to his former chief of staff and may extend to current staff members. 

Failed to prosecute — for now

Jerome Powell

Trump appointed Powell to chair the Fed during his first term but has berated him repeatedly for not cutting interest rates more quickly.
“He is truly one of my worst appointments,” Trump said of Powell last year, adding that he was a “numbskull” he would “love” to fire. 
An investigation into Powell’s oversight of a $2.5bn renovation project at the central bank’s headquarters was launched in January by Jeanine Pirro, US attorney for the District of Columbia. 
A federal judge stopped the probe after finding “abundant evidence” that it was part of a pressure campaign against the central bank head. Pirro vowed to restart it if new details emerge.

Letitia James

New York attorney-general Letitia James took on Trump’s Manhattan business empire with a sprawling civil lawsuit alleging he had fraudulently inflated his net worth. She obtained a staggering $464mn judgment against him, but a federal appeals court overturned the fine. New York’s top court is reviewing the case.  
Trump has called her “racist” and “corrupt” and said her investigation was a “witch-hunt”. 
James was initially indicted over mortgage fraud allegations, but the case was thrown out after the prosecutor’s appointment was ruled to be unlawful. Two subsequent prosecutions have failed to reindict her. 
Federal prosecutors are still investigating financial transactions tied to both James and her longtime hairdresser.

Minnesota officials 

Minnesota’s top officials, including Governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey, were investigated over whether they obstructed or impeded law enforcement during the Trump administration’s violent crackdown on immigrants in the state earlier this year, when two US citizens were shot by federal agents. 
Trump has called Walz “moronic” and “completely incompetent”, and said he and his officials have “totally lost control” of the state. 
A federal judge this month quashed the DoJ’s subpoenasafter finding their primary purpose was to “coerce” the officials into helping the Trump administration enforce its immigration policies, and to “harass and retaliate” against them when they refused. 

The ‘seditious six’ 

Late last year, as concern grew over the legality of US military strikes on alleged drug-trafficking boats in the Caribbean, six Democratic lawmakers appeared in a video reminding service members that they could refuse to carry out illegal orders.
Trump described their message as “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH!” in a post on his Truth Social platform.
Pirro sought charges against the six — who had all served in the military or intelligence services — but a grand jury refused to indict them. The Pentagon separately targeted one of them, Senator Mark Kelly, threatening him with military legal proceedings that could lead to a court-martial or “administrative measures”. It is the subject of an ongoing legal battle.

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Genesian Theatre / It was a church, a theatre and gave Baz Luhrmann his start. Now it’s Sydney’s latest nightclub

Piece of history Buz worked at NSW bear Pit … Parliamentary Library in 1980s Dr Cope employed him for two years 

In 1986 my neighbour from Bellevue Hill Sonya Todd went to Bratislava - Czechoslovakia with Strictly Ballroom 


Killara - Luncheon Green Gate Hotel  


Dinner with Katka Centennial Park


It was a church, a theatre and gave Baz Luhrmann his start. Now it’s Sydney’s latest nightclub




Jethro Massey walked into my shop last week and told me about his movie, which he said was partly inspired by some articles he’d read right here on my blog. His film was rejected by Cannes and yet won a prize at the Venice Film Festival. I loved it, and not because I recognised so many stories in its. For a film that so beautifully and imaginatively showcases Paris, I couldn’t understand why he’s been unable to find proper distribution for the film, save for a few special screenings. I highly recommend this singular film, and if you’re in a position to help its distribution, do get in touch!


Wine-tasting isn’t something most people would associate with running, but one marathon proves that they can go hand-in-hand. The Marathon du Medoc route takes thirsty runners through Bordeaux’s vineyards and châteaux. As well as the usual water stations, runners can pick up high-calorie snacks – foie gras, cheese, oysters – and sample the region’s wines en route.

Start training for the September 5th Marathon du Medoc in Bordeaux, France


Open that Bottle Night encourages people to finally open a special bottle of wine they’ve been holding onto. Read up on the history, courtesy of Chris Glass.


Try out Brik.Space. A recommendation from Swiss Miss.


SPEAKING AS WHAT LIBRARIANS AND PUBLISHERS CALL AN “ESCAPE READER,” THAT’S GOOD NEWS FOR ME: Getting Lost in a Novel Is Actually One of the Best Things You Can Do for Your Brain.



 Scientists begin first trial to reverse human aging


Inside Castel Béranger, one of Paris’s great Art Nouveau buildings, a restored 635 ft² apartment has come to market with Sotheby’s for €1,198,000.


The tea in your kombucha changes more than just the taste Science Daily 


A philosopher’s 5 tips on how to become the most likeable person in the room Big Think


Václav Havel Library And Kundera

Words left behind, carried forward by others


Reading to children, even before they can understand words, teaches them to associate books with love and affection.


It is hard to tell who was more crazy me or everyone else …


"Books are many things: lullabies for the weary, ointment for the wounded, armour for the fearful and nests for those in need of a home."

- Glenda Millard.


Books don't just go with you. They take you where you've never been


Not just books - how renting a sewing machine from the library can improve democracy


Record breaking heat in Bohemia


America vs Europe: Two Ways to Build a City


Václav Havel Library


       Via I am pointed to Jules Eisenchteter's piece at expats.cz explaining Why Prague’s Václav Havel Library is on the verge of collapse
       It sounds like quite the mess, and is of course unfortunate; the library has done good work and obviously there's great potential here. (Still, anything personality-focused, such as this obviously is around Havel, is, of course, problematic.)
       Current (and relatively new) director Tomáš Sedláček apparently has ... ideas:
Sedláček, a vocal critic of the “Prague café” scene he felt had monopolized the legacy of the playwright-statesman, had vowed to shake things up at the library by using AI tools to streamline operations and run the institution with a leaner staff, as well as launching a public, “Eurovision-style” competition for artists to design a new symbol of freedom.
       One hopes they figure things out.








Kundera in Brno


       The ashes of Milan Kundera (The Curtain, etc.) and his wife have been laid to rest in a tomb in Brno -- taking: "the last vacant spot in the circle of honor at Brno’s Central Cemetery" --; see, for example, Jack Stephens' report at Brno Daily, Milan Kundera and His Wife Laid To Rest In Brno's Central Cemetery or the official Brno city press release

       Lots of pictures in the official photo gallery, including of the top of the "levitating" lid of the tomb designed by Johannes Paar being lowered -- as well as the two urns in place before they were covered up




       Slavenka Drakulić (1949-2026)

       Croatian author Slavenka Drakulić has passed away; see, for example, the report at Vijesti. 

       Quite a few of her works have been translated into English; see, for example, her author page at Penguin Random House, or the Harper Perennial publicity page for How We Survived Communism and Even Laughed.



Human brains were not designed to deal with an endless supply of bad news. “We are the same species as we were thousands of years ago. What’s changed is the size of the world it’s asked to scan for threats.”