Latorre offers an essential reflection on the technological singularity. The new social contract is not an option: it is an urgency.

We are about to renegotiate one of humanity's oldest agreements. For more than two centuries, the social contract has governed our coexistence, defining what we relinquish as individuals in exchange for protection, rights, and collective order. But for the first time in history, humans share the world with an entity capable of learning, deciding, and acting autonomously: artificial intelligence.

Can we trust it to govern? What rights and duties should we establish in relation to machines? What will be the place of the human being in a world shared with an artificial intelligence that may be faster, more precise, and perhaps wiser than our own?

Between scientific reasoning and humanistic reflection, the author proposes the need for a new social contract that incorporates three inseparable dimensions-the natural, the civil, and the intelligent-without falling either into paralyzing fear or naïve faith in technology. Artificial intelligence is not only a technological challenge. Above all, it is a political, ethical-always human-question.



Autorentext

José Ignacio Latorre (Barcelona, 1959) is a theoretical physicist and an international reference in quantum computing and artificial intelligence. He holds a PhD from the University of Barcelona and has developed his scientific career at MIT (USA), the Niels Bohr Institute (Denmark), Nikhef (Netherlands), TII (United Arab Emirates), and NUS (Singapore). He has been a professor at the University of Barcelona, director of the Pedro Pascual Benasque Center for Science, is currently director of the Center for Quantum Technologies in Singapore, and co-founder of Qilimanjaro Quantum Technologies. He is the author of «Cuántica» and «Ética para máquinas».

Titel
A New Social Contract
Untertitel
Governing a world with non-human intelligences
EAN
9791399141962
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
18.03.2026
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Dateigrösse
1.23 MB
Anzahl Seiten
240