Idea in Brief

The Breakthrough

A new generation of AI systems are no longer merely our tools—they’re active participants in our lives, making consequential decisions and shaping social and economic outcomes.

The New Concept

We need to think of these new systems as autosapiens—“auto” in that they are able to act autonomously, and “sapiens” in that they possess a capacity to make complex judgments that can rival and even outstrip those of humans.

The Imperative

The challenge of the autosapient age will be finding ways to enhance rather than diminish human agency. To do so, we’ll need an unprecedented alliance of policymakers, corporate leaders, activists, technologists, and consumers.

The wheel, the steam engine, the personal computer: Throughout history, technologies have been our tools. Whether used to create or destroy, they have always been under human control, behaving in predictable and rule-based ways. As we write, this assumption is unraveling. A new generation of AI systems are no longer merely our tools—they are becoming actors in and of themselves, participants in our lives, behaving autonomously, making consequential decisions, and shaping social and economic outcomes.

A version of this article appeared in the January–February 2024 issue of Harvard Business Review.