Inadequate Equilibria — When Smart Systems Stay Stupid
Some books are valuable because they tell you something new. Others are valuable because they give shape and clarity to things you had already half noticed but never fully articulated. Inadequate Equilibria: Where and How Civilizations Get Stuck belongs firmly in the second category for me. Written by Eliezer Yudkowsky, the book asks a deceptively simple question: why do entire systems, institutions, and even civilizations sometimes remain stuck in arrangements that are obviously worse than they could be? That framing immediately appealed to me. I had recently read Steven Pinker’s Rationality , which I enjoyed even if I did not necessarily feel I learned many entirely new things from it. Pinker’s focus is largely on why it is difficult for individuals to think rationally. Inadequate Equilibria , by contrast, shifts the lens outward. It asks why whole societies can get trapped in patterns that seem plainly inferior, and why such systems can persist for so long despite their flaws. ...