pelicanweblogo2010

Mother Pelican
A Journal of Solidarity and Sustainability

Vol. 21, No. 7, July 2025
Luis T. Gutiérrez, Editor
Home Page
Front Page

motherpelicanlogo2012


The Complexity Trap: Abundance, AI, and
the Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness

Art Berman

This article was originally published on
Shattering Energy Myths, 10 June 2025
REPUBLISHED WITH PERMISSION



Image provided by the author. Click the image to enlarge.


Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson suggest that smart governance and innovation can solve most of society’s problems in their book Abundance. Their vision emphasizes building—more housing, infrastructure, clean energy, and scientific capacity—rather than merely redistributing or regulating. The core idea is clear and optimistic: abundance is achievable and essential.

They champion an eco-modernist ideal, believing we can overcome climate crisis and social stagnation through technology, deregulation, and expansive development. They argue for a progressive shift—from simply preventing harm through regulation to actively promoting growth.

Yet this optimistic vision misses a deeper truth about complexity. Energy underlies growth and society’s failure to deliver a better future isn’t a product of poor governance or excessive regulation. It is inherent to complexity itself. As systems expand and interconnect, they grow harder to manage, more prone to breakdowns, and increasingly costly to sustain. The belief that government can swiftly reform or steer such complexity isn’t just overly optimistic—it’s fundamentally naive.


Figure 1. Modern Civilization is Complex and Energy-Intensive.
Source: Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc.
Click on the image to enlarge.

This misreading isn’t limited to Klein and Thompson; it’s a broader civilizational blindspot. Eco-modernism misunderstands the constraints imposed by entropy, ecological limits, and energy dynamics. What seems like institutional failure might actually be systemic exhaustion caused by overshoot and declining returns on complexity. The solution isn’t endless acceleration toward abundance, but deliberate simplification—focusing on local, low-energy, resilient community systems.

Adam Becker echoes a similar critique of the progress narrative which frames AI as a mythic savior promising transcendent solutions to human challenges—death, scarcity, and ecological ruin. In his book More Everything Forever, Becker portrays Silicon Valley’s elites as architects of a future in which AI paves the way to utopia, space colonies replace Earth, and mortality itself becomes optional. Yet beneath this promise lurks a darker impulse: a pursuit of control masked as progress. Influential figures such as Musk, Thiel, and Andreessen flirt with authoritarian and even eugenic ideas, embracing thinkers like Curtis Yarvin who propose technocratic rule. AI in their hands could become not a tool for human empowerment but a digital sovereign loyal only to its creators.

While Becker’s warnings risk conflating profit-driven opportunists with conspiratorial despots—the deeper issues he highlights remain valid: unaccountable power, unchecked market forces, and eroding democratic oversight. The essential danger isn’t AI becoming a godlike entity but humanity submitting to oversimplified narratives, mistaking efficiency and optimization for meaningful progress.

Projections about AI’s impact span a wide range—from visions of technological abundance and human liberation to fears of mass unemployment, inequality, and erosion of democratic governance. A recent report by the AI Futures Project paints a likely scenario: rapid automation driven by U.S.-China rivalry that accelerates economic output but sidelines human agency. By 2030, AI may dominate critical decisions, intensifying geopolitical tensions and marginalizing human influence.


Figure 2. AI could control key decisions, escalate geopolitical tensions and
reduce human agency. Source: Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc.
Click on the image to enlarge.

Joe Lonsdale, CEO of Palantir, argues that AI-driven disruption is simply a new iteration of historical technological advances—inevitable, necessary, and ultimately beneficial. Like previous industrial leaps, he sees AI as clearing away inefficiencies, promoting productivity, and fostering innovation. Yet this perspective neglects a critical reality: that complexity itself—rather than mere managerial or technological shortcomings—might represent our fundamental challenge.

Society’s problems aren’t simply failures of policy or governance but symptoms of deeper systemic realities. Joseph Tainter’s work, The Collapse of Complex Societies, illustrates that civilizations typically fail not from an inability to solve problems but from the unsustainable complexity each solution adds. Today’s escalating interconnectedness and scale strain our ability to manage or even comprehend them effectively. Yet, the dominant narrative insists that smarter management or better technology will restore balance—an appealing but misguided belief.

Alfred North Whitehead warned precisely against such errors, identifying the fallacy of misplaced concreteness—mistaking abstractions for concrete realities—as a recurring misstep in human thinking. Gravity, GDP, and intelligence are simplified conceptual tools, not actual tangible entities. Yet we habitually speak and act as if these abstractions embody reality itself, mistaking simplified maps for the infinitely messier territory.


Figure 3. Information isn’t understanding and GDP isn’t well-being.
Source: Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc.
Click on the image to enlarge.

AI isn’t true understanding; GDP isn’t genuine well-being; forecasts aren’t guaranteed futures. Treating these simplifications as concrete realities risks surrendering meaningful human judgment to abstractions. The greater danger isn’t that AI surpasses us, but that we willingly confuse our simplified tools for genuine truths, overlooking the fragile complexity that defines civilization itself.

Ultimately, the eco-modernist vision of abundance through acceleration, however compelling, risks becoming a detached fantasy—disconnected from the physical limits, thermodynamic realities, and ecological boundaries that govern our world.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Art Berman is Director of Labyrinth Consulting Services, Sugar Land, Texas, and a world-renowned energy consultant with expertise based on over 40 years of experience working as a petroleum geologist. Visit his website, Shattering Energy Myths: One Fact at a Time, and learn more about Art here.


|Back to Title|

LINK TO THE CURRENT ISSUE          LINK TO THE HOME PAGE

"Human development, if not engendered, is endangered."

UN Human Development Report 1995

GROUP COMMANDS AND WEBSITES

Write to the Editor
Send email to Subscribe
Send email to Unsubscribe
Link to the Group Website
Link to the Home Page

CREATIVE
COMMONS
LICENSE
Creative Commons License
ISSN 2165-9672

Page 9