
Hayek - Can Intelligence Be Centralized?
Can AI know what you know? Is AI somehow limited?
For this session, we’ll read Friedrich Hayek’s “The Use of Knowledge in Society” (1945) alongside “The Meaning of Competition” (1946). Both essays ask what happens when we mistake social order for a problem of calculation.
Hayek argues that the knowledge needed to coordinate society is dispersed, local, practical, and often impossible to centralize. Prices matter because they communicate fragments of knowledge no single person possesses. Competition matters because it discovers what no planner could know in advance.
Reading them together sets up the central question: if knowledge is bound to situation, context, and use, what can any central intelligence — a state, a firm, a bureaucracy, or an AI system — really know?
3359 26th St, San Francisco, CA 94110, USA, 94110, San Francisco
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3359 26th St, San Francisco, CA 94110, USA, 94110, San Francisco
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