AI researcher at Anthropic quits job to write Poetry

Louanne Learning

Active Member
Member
New Member
Role Play Moderator
Winner: 4th Contest August Winner: June Flash Fiction
Top AI experts at OpenAI, Anthropic and other AI companies warn of the rising dangers of their technology.

Zoë Hitzig, a former OpenAI researcher, left last week, citing “deep reservations about OpenAI’s strategy” – She writes in a NYT guest essay – “OpenAI seems to have stopped asking the questions I’d joined to help answer.”

Another OpenAI employee, Hieu Pham, wrote on X – “Today, I finally feel the existential threat that AI is posing. When AI becomes overly good and disrupts everything, what will be left for humans to do? And it’s when, not if.”

And - Mrinank Sharma, (PhD in Statistical Machine Learning, University of Oxford) - a top researcher at Anthropic - has quit his job to write poetry.

In his resignation letter – posted below – he writes –

“We appear to be approaching a threshold where our wisdom must grow in equal measures to our capacity to affect the world, lest we face the consequences…

I want to contribute in a way that feels fully in my integrity…

I feel called to writing that addresses and engages fully with the place we find ourselves, and places poetic truth alongside scientific truth as equally valid ways of knowing…

I hope to explore a poetry degree and devote myself to the practice of courageous speech.”



I like his mention of “courage.” I think that is an important human element, or feature, of the creative process.

AI can never have access to the language of the soul and spirituality. AI can never represent with symbols the way humans do.


1771349001281.jpeg

1771349040908.jpeg
 
Quit my job to write poetry.... Why didn't I think of that? :(

Zoë Hitzig, a former OpenAI researcher, left last week, citing “deep reservations about OpenAI’s strategy” – She writes in a NYT guest essay – “OpenAI seems to have stopped asking the questions I’d joined to help answer.”
It sounds like she wasn't a fan of arithmetic, the same arithmetic that paid her salt in the first place.

Another OpenAI employee, Hieu Pham, wrote on X – “Today, I finally feel the existential threat that AI is posing. When AI becomes overly good and disrupts everything, what will be left for humans to do? And it’s when, not if.”
That take is a bit milquetoast/unimaginative if I'm being honest. If you believe algorithm models can eventually dominate humans at, quote, "everything," (which also implies that robotics will be able to take on any and all physical endeavours, ha, ha) then this dreamer only needs to presume there are future, unimaginable tasks that humans should be doing instead.

Hieu is probably just trying to drum up more publicity for OpenAI, in the same way AI leaders have tried to foment Terminator style panic about the tech in order to keep us from losing interest. They might go public this year, which will be huge.
 

Today, I downloaded Sharma's book of published poetry - We Live and Die a Thousand Times - and reading this one below - I wondered - is he speaking to his poetry?


My Debt

My Debt Long ago, I made you my debt,
a crying child, who buried, wept.
Today looking back, it is my deepest regret
that I left you back there and tried to forget.

Yes, my dear, I locked you away
afraid of more hurt, that price I did pay.
I tried, my dear, what else can I say?
I left you back there, there to decay.

But today, my love, I went back and saw
that my plans, my acts, they did have their draw,
their hope, a hope, to hide a thought flaw—
you, my dear, so tired and raw,
you, my dear, the source of all awe.

I left on this journey; I thought I must come
and travel to this place in search of freedom,
and to find what I did, I had to become
the child who could sing, the man who could see
that to unshackle those chains, you must be
let be a blossoming petal, so tender and free,
the heart of my heart, a treasure to me.
 
You could always just retire?
I can't find an apparent shred of virtue or even notable character in his act of resignation/letter. Are we talking about him because he's said that he wants to speak courageously? I genuinely don't get it. He made enough money as an AI researcher to be comfortable at a relatively young age in a HCoL area and is now abandoning his primary bread since he has earned the privilege to do so.

It might as well read: "I made enough F-you money to finally F off and possibly become a pseudo-spirituality guru if my website is any indication." Which is of course what I'll write when I retire.
 
Back
Top