AGI is often framed as a continuation of current AI progress, but it may represent a qualitative shift rather than a quantitative one.
Not all technologies are of the same kind.
Some function as tools (e.g., cars, elevators), while others function more like shared conditions that reshape the environment in which decisions are made.
In that sense, AGI may be closer to a “sun” than to a “tool”: not something we simply use, but something that defines the space in which we act.
This distinction matters, because treating AGI purely as an instrument may obscure the importance of alignment, interaction, and long-term co-adaptation.
The challenge may not be control alone, but co-evolution a process in which both humans and artificial systems adapt through ongoing interaction.
In biological terms, evolution is not only driven by competition, but by mutual selection.
Of course, AGI will still be engineered systems in practice, subject to design choices and constraints.
The point here is not to deny its instrumental aspects, but to highlight that its effects may extend beyond conventional tool-like boundaries.
If AGI is approached in this way, the central question shifts: not simply how to build it, but how to relate to it in a way that remains stable, aligned, and beneficial over time.
Inspired by the film Sunshine (2007, dir. Danny Boyle) — particularly the image of the crew not simply "using" the sun, but being consumed and redefined by proximity to it.
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