Instead they worked hard, and collected a coalition, and built an international nuclear anti-proliferation regime.
I think it’s important to note that this happened after two catastrophes—Hiroshima and the Cuban Missile Crisis. I think the overall sentiment of this article is probably correct, and law is necessary. The question is how it can come about. The ‘working hard’ bit here deserves more elaboration, especially regarding the necessary conditions for hard work to actually pay off. Is a catastrophe required for AI to get its non-proliferation regime?
This is really thought provoking work. I think the power of personal diplomacy may have been overplayed at the point where ‘the President’ and Xi are mentioned hashing out capabilities limitations over phone call. I understand it’s an optimistic scenario, but these things are generally procedural. Is that a baked in assumption?-- that the standard means of accomplishing international cooperation will have to fall by the wayside in favor of a more gung-ho, personal style of diplomacy if something like The Coalition is to be achieved? I’m generally interested in how you guys made your assumptions re: where incentive structures could carry the day vs. where more concerted political will would have to be built.