As I continue to react to Harari’s Nexus, I canāt help but feel like a curmudgeon. Our worldviews diverge so starkly that my critique begins to feel like a petty grudgeāas though I am inconsolable. Be that as it may, Iāll persist. Please excuse any revelatory ad hominems that may ensue.
Harari is an unabashed Zionist and unapologetic nationalist. Unfortunately, his stories, centred on Israel and India, donāt resonate with me. This is fineāIām sure many people outside the US are equally weary of hearing everything framed from an American perspective. Still, these narratives do little for me.
Patriotism and property are clearly important to Harari. As a Modernist, he subscribes to all the trappings of Modernist thought that I rail against. He appears aligned with the World Economic Forum, portraying it as a noble and beneficial bureaucracy, while viewing AI as an existential threat to its control. Harariās worldview suggests there are objectively good and bad systems, and someone must oversee them. Naturally, he presents himself as possessing the discernment to judge which systems are beneficial or detrimental.
In this chapter, Harari recounts the cholera outbreak in London, crediting it with fostering a positive bureaucracy to ensure clean water sources. However, he conflates the tireless efforts of a single physician with the broader bureaucratic structure. He uses this example, alongside Modiās Clean India initiative, to champion bureaucracy, even as he shares a personal anecdote highlighting its flaws. His rhetorical strategy seems aimed at cherry-picking positive aspects of bureaucracy, establishing a strawman to diminish its negatives, and then linking these with artificial intelligence. As an institutionalist, Harari even goes so far as to defend the ādeep state.ā
Earlier, Harari explained how communication evolved from Human ā Human to Human ā Stories. Now, he introduces Human ā Document systems, connecting these to authority, the growing power of administrators, and the necessity of archives. He argues that our old stories have not adapted to address the complexities of the modern world. Here, he sets up religion as another bogeyman. As a fellow atheist, I donāt entirely disagree with him, but itās clear heās using religion as a metaphor to draw parallels with AI and intractable doctrines.
Harari juxtaposes ādeath by tigerā with ādeath by document,ā suggesting the latterāthe impersonal demise caused by bureaucracyāis harder to grapple with. This predates Luigi Mangioneās infamous response to UnitedHealthcareās CEO Brian Thompson, highlighting the devastating impact of administrative systems. Harari also briefly references obligate siblicide and sibling rivalry, which seem to segue into evolution and concepts of purity versus impurity.
Echoing Jonathan Haidt, Harari explores the dynamics of curiosity and disgust while reinforcing an āus versus themā narrative. He touches on the enduring challenges of Indiaās caste system, presenting yet another layer of complexity. Harariās inclination towards elitism shines through, though he occasionally acknowledges the helplessness people face when confronting bureaucracy. He seems particularly perturbed by revolts in which the public destroys documents and debtsārevealing what feels like a document fetish and an obsession with traceability.
While he lauds AIās ability to locate documents and weave stories by connecting disparate content, Harari concludes the chapter with a segue into the next: a discussion of errors and holy books. Once again, he appears poised to draw parallels that serve to undermine AI. Despite my critiques, Iām ready to dive into the next chapter.