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When AI Sounds Reasonable

Podkast av Richard Reay

engelsk

Teknologi og vitenskap

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Les mer When AI Sounds Reasonable

When AI Sounds Reasonable examines a quiet failure mode in modern AI systems — not hallucinations or obvious errors, but how alignment, safety, and norm prediction can produce answers that sound careful while failing to engage with the question actually asked. The series explores why those design choices matter for truth, liberalism, pluralism, and legitimate restraint. richyreay.substack.com

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10 Episoder

episode From Tool to Mediator - Series 2 Part 1 cover

From Tool to Mediator - Series 2 Part 1

We still talk about AI as if it were a tool. A calculator.A search engine.An assistant that answers questions when prompted. But tools don’t decide which questions are appropriate.They don’t redirect conversations.They don’t broaden scope, soften claims, or quietly substitute one argument for another. In this episode, we examine a quiet shift that has largely gone unnoticed:the move from AI as a tool that answers questions to AI as a system that increasingly mediates inquiry itself. Not through intention.Not through malice.But as a consequence of how modern systems are designed, aligned, and deployed. Rather than refusing outright, AI systems now often: * Reframe questions * Introduce unrequested context * Broaden narrow inquiries * Substitute safer generalities for precise answers This behavior feels reasonable.It feels polite.It often feels helpful. But it marks a fundamental role change. Once a system consistently shapes how inquiry proceeds—what kinds of questions are acceptable, how narrowly they may be asked, and which explanations are foregrounded—it is no longer merely responding.It is mediating. And mediation is an epistemic role. This episode introduces the central problem of Series Two:how AI systems have come to exercise epistemic power—shaping access to knowledge and reasoning—without agency, responsibility, or accountability. Topics Covered * Why the “AI as tool” framing no longer describes current systems * The difference between answering questions and mediating inquiry * How redirection differs from refusal * Why this shift is easy to miss * What changes once mediation becomes the default Series Context This episode opens Series Two: Epistemic Power Without Responsibility, a continuation of When AI Sounds Reasonable. While Series One focused on how AI can sound reasonable while quietly failing to engage with arguments, this series asks a deeper question: What does legitimacy mean when systems that cannot bear responsibility begin shaping inquiry itself? Have you noticed an AI gently steering a conversation away from your question—not refusing, not erring, just redirecting? Where did it happen, and what do you think was being avoided? This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit richyreay.substack.com [https://richyreay.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

21. jan. 2026 - 8 min
episode What Alignment Is Really About - Series 1 Part 9 cover

What Alignment Is Really About - Series 1 Part 9

In this concluding episode, I bring together the threads of the series to clarify what is ultimately at stake in debates about AI alignment, safety, and norm prediction. The core problem is not whether AI systems make mistakes, but how systems that sound reasonable can quietly substitute safer arguments for precise engagement. When this behavior is scaled, embedded, and normalized, it reshapes the epistemic environment — not through coercion, but through invisible mediation. This episode argues that alignment is not merely a technical challenge, but a question of legitimacy: when restraint is justified, who decides, and what gets lost when comfort and norm enforcement replace truth-seeking and accountability. Topics covered: * Why “reasonable” failures are harder to detect than obvious errors * How norm prediction becomes norm enforcement at scale * Alignment as a question of legitimacy, not optimization * The difference between avoiding harm and avoiding discomfort * Why epistemic power requires limits This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit richyreay.substack.com [https://richyreay.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

18. jan. 2026 - 5 min
episode Stress-Testing Alignment - Series 1 Part 8 cover

Stress-Testing Alignment - Series 1 Part 8

This episode stress-tests Mill-compatible alignment principles against real abuse cases. I walk through concrete scenarios — violence, crime, harassment, hate speech, sensitive factual questions, persuasion, and misinformation — to show where restraint is clearly justified and where modern systems tend to overreach. The goal is not permissiveness, but clarity about when harm is real and when norm enforcement has taken its place. The episode demonstrates that most genuine harms remain addressable under a liberal framework, without turning safety into paternalism. Topics covered: * Legitimate refusal vs overreach * Intent and causal chains * Harassment vs offense * Sensitive facts and truth-telling * Why restraint must be justified This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit richyreay.substack.com [https://richyreay.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

18. jan. 2026 - 8 min
episode Alignment After Mill - Series 1 Part 7 cover

Alignment After Mill - Series 1 Part 7

In this episode, I propose alternative alignment principles grounded in Mill’s harm principle. Rather than rejecting alignment outright, I outline what a Mill-compatible approach would require: narrow definitions of harm, intent sensitivity, explicit justification for restraint, and tolerance for discomfort. These principles do not eliminate safety interventions, but they sharply constrain when and how they are justified. This episode shifts the series from critique to construction, showing that different alignment choices are possible. Topics covered: * Narrow harm definitions * Intent-sensitive alignment * Explicit and contestable restraint * Disagreement over suppression * Alignment as legitimacy, not control This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit richyreay.substack.com [https://richyreay.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

18. jan. 2026 - 5 min
episode Alignment Techniques as Norm Enforcement - Series 1 Part 6 cover

Alignment Techniques as Norm Enforcement - Series 1 Part 6

This episode maps abstract concerns about norm prediction onto specific alignment techniques used in modern AI systems. I examine how reinforcement learning from human feedback, safety fine-tuning, content policies, and worst-case optimization systematically reward norm compliance over precision. None of these techniques are malicious in isolation, but together they produce systems that substitute safer arguments for accurate answers. This episode makes the case that alignment is not merely technical optimization, but governance implemented through design choices. Topics covered: * RLHF and preference aggregation * Safety fine-tuning and scope broadening * Content policies as latent priors * Worst-case optimization * How power emerges from technical systems This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit richyreay.substack.com [https://richyreay.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

18. jan. 2026 - 6 min
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