06 - Nexus A Brief History of Information Netwo...
06 - Nexus A Brief History of Information Netwo...

06 | - Nexus A Brief History Of Information Netwo...

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Harari challenges the "naive" belief that more information automatically leads to more wisdom or truth. Historically, information's primary role has been to create order and forge large-scale cooperation. 06 - Nexus A Brief History of Information Netwo...

However, a true network requires more than just a storage medium; it requires infrastructure. The Roman Empire created the first large-scale information network through roads and the cursus publicus —the state courier system. This was the "Hardware" of the ancient world. Information moved at the speed of a horse, but it moved with reliability. The "Nexus" of the ancient world was Rome itself, a central hub where all roads led, creating a star-topology network that bound a continent together through administrative data. It looks like you’re referencing a title: –

A human scientist, when confronted with an anomaly, experiences doubt. Doubt triggers a recursive loop: Maybe I am wrong. Let me check my assumptions. Current AI has no doubt. It processes statistical correlations at enormous speed, but it cannot ask, "Is the data I trained on itself a product of broken feedback loops?" If you train an AI on 500 years of biased historical records, it will confidently amplify those biases. The network will be fast, precise, and catastrophically wrong. However, a true network requires more than just

, Yuval Noah Harari examines the historical evolution of how humans connect and the existential risks posed by the advent of artificial intelligence. Harari argues that while information networks have granted humanity immense power, they are fundamentally built to prioritize connection and order over truth, often leading to systemic self-destruction. 1. The Naive View of Information