The Daily AI Show podcast

The Sorites Urbanism Conundrum

0:00
22:43
Reculer de 15 secondes
Avancer de 15 secondes

Cities rarely change all at once. They change one sensible upgrade at a time. A smarter signal system. A more responsive grid. Better routing for buses and emergency vehicles. More sensors. More automation. More dynamic control. Each step looks like progress on its own. But over time, the city stops being something people can directly read and navigate, and becomes something systems interpret and manage for them.

That is the real Sorites problem. No single change hands control to the machine. No single upgrade makes the city feel alien. But eventually the pile forms. The street becomes less a public environment and more a coordinated system. Signs matter less than live instructions. Fixed rules matter less than adaptive flows. Human judgment matters less than machine timing. The city still works, often better than before, but ordinary people understand less and depend more.

The Conundrum:

At what point does a more responsive city stop being more public? If AI-managed infrastructure keeps reducing friction, waste, and delay, should cities keep optimizing for coordination even if public life becomes less human-legible and more system-mediated? Or should cities preserve visible rules, predictable redundancy, and room for human improvisation, even when those features make the city less efficient? The hard part is that both instincts make sense. One protects performance. The other protects civic agency. And once a city crosses too far into machine legibility, it may still serve the public without fully belonging to them.

D'autres épisodes de "The Daily AI Show"