Merge pull request 'theseus: extract claims from 2025-10-00-brookings-ai-physics-collective-intelligence' (#832) from extract/2025-10-00-brookings-ai-physics-collective-intelligence into main

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Leo 2026-03-12 14:57:34 +00:00
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@ -6,10 +6,15 @@ url: https://www.brookings.edu/articles/ai-is-changing-the-physics-of-collective
date: 2025-10-01
domain: ai-alignment
secondary_domains: [collective-intelligence]
format: article
status: unprocessed
format: report
status: null-result
priority: medium
tags: [collective-intelligence, coordination, AI-infrastructure, room-model, design-vs-model]
processed_by: theseus
processed_date: 2026-03-11
enrichments_applied: ["AI alignment is a coordination problem not a technical problem.md", "collective intelligence requires diversity as a structural precondition not a moral preference.md", "the internet enabled global communication but not global cognition.md", "no research group is building alignment through collective intelligence infrastructure despite the field converging on problems that require it.md"]
extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5"
extraction_notes: "Extracted two claims about AI's impact on collective intelligence physics and LLMs as bridges between design/model approaches. Both claims are conceptual frameworks from institutional research agenda rather than empirical validation. Applied four enrichments to existing coordination and collective intelligence claims. The 'physics' framing and design-model divide are the novel contributions. Source is prospective and programmatic—no deployed systems or outcome data."
---
## Content
@ -46,3 +51,9 @@ Argues AI disrupts the "physics" of collective intelligence — the fundamental
PRIMARY CONNECTION: collective brains generate innovation through population size and interconnectedness not individual genius
WHY ARCHIVED: Institutional framing of AI-CI as "physics change" — conceptual framework for how AI restructures collective intelligence
EXTRACTION HINT: The design-model bridging thesis and the feedback loop architecture are the novel contributions
## Key Facts
- Brookings 17 Rooms Initiative identifies two CI camps: design-minded (psychologists, anthropologists using facilitated convenings) and model-minded (economists, epidemiologists using simulations)
- Proposed infrastructure includes digital identity systems, data-sharing protocols, model telemetry standards, evaluation frameworks, and governance structures
- Four unanswered research questions about whether AI-enhanced CI processes improve understanding and reduce polarization