A long time ago I read Ted Chiang’s short story Catching crumbs from the table, about how humans stopped doing science once metahumans arrived on the scene, and I wondered when that day would come, mentally substituting “AI” for “metahuman”:
It has been 25 years since a report of original research was last submitted to our editors for publication, making this an appropriate time to revisit the question that was so widely debated then: what is the role of human scientists in an age when the frontiers of scientific inquiry have moved beyond the comprehensibility of humans?
No doubt many of our subscribers remember reading papers whose authors were the first individuals ever to obtain the results they described. But as metahumans began to dominate experimental research, they increasingly made their findings available only via DNT (digital neural transfer), leaving journals to publish second-hand accounts translated into human language. Without DNT, humans could not fully grasp earlier developments nor effectively utilize the new tools needed to conduct research, while metahumans continued to improve DNT and rely on it even more. Journals for human audiences were reduced to vehicles of popularization, and poor ones at that, as even the most brilliant humans found themselves puzzled by translations of the latest findings.
No one denies the many benefits of metahuman science, but one of its costs to human researchers was the realization that they would probably never make an original contribution to science again. Some left the field altogether, but those who stayed shifted their attentions away from original research and toward hermeneutics: interpreting the scientific work of metahumans. …
A long time ago I read Ted Chiang’s short story Catching crumbs from the table, about how humans stopped doing science once metahumans arrived on the scene, and I wondered when that day would come, mentally substituting “AI” for “metahuman”:
Today I found out about AISC 2026: The AI Scientists Conference, which reminded me of that Ted Chiang short story.