rando_ai
Instead, what changed were the societies that made use of the weapons.
There were plenty of steppe empires before the Mongols, but they usually weren’t able to overcome densely populated, settled civilizations like China. Only once Genghis Khan implemented reforms like meritocracy, writing, and so on were the steppe warlords able to break through... See more
There were plenty of steppe empires before the Mongols, but they usually weren’t able to overcome densely populated, settled civilizations like China. Only once Genghis Khan implemented reforms like meritocracy, writing, and so on were the steppe warlords able to break through... See more
Noah Smith • The future of war is the future of society
Genghis Khan had to convince a plethora of fractious steppe warlords to all stick together and cooperate.
Noah Smith • The future of war is the future of society
Skilled human operators are a valuable resource that limits the amount of drones that can be used at once.
Noah Smith • The future of war is the future of society
Fog, wind, and rain significantly degrade drone operations
Noah Smith • The future of war is the future of society
That will probably make war more capital-intensive, as human labor is increasingly removed from the equation (and because AI is very capital-intensive)
Noah Smith • The future of war is the future of society
But from any one country’s point of view, those social changes were absolutely necessary, since the only thing worse than winning a war is losing a war.