There is a profound irony in our current cultural moment: as we marvel at the prospect of machines learning to improve themselves, we are allowing our own capacity for self-improvement to atrophy.
"Recursive self-improvement"—the process by which an AI system analyzes its own code to become better at the act of improving itself—is now the subject of sober warnings from leading AI labs. Experts fear that if AI achieves this exponential feedback loop, humanity could lose control. But while we brace for a machine-driven singularity, we have forgotten that the recursive loop is deeply, fundamentally human.
Ordinary growth is linear. But recursive growth is architectural. It upgrades the process of upgrading. In AI, this is powered by a "seed improver." In the human operating system, this seed improver is our conscience—our relentless, quiet drive to turn our awareness back upon itself.
This inward voyage is the foundation of human wisdom. "Know thyself," inscribed on the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, was an early instruction manual for human RSI. Marcus Aurelius wrote of looking inward to find an endless spring of strength. The inward journeys of Buddhism, Sufism, and the Christian mystics all describe the same recursive loop: examining the self in order to elevate the self that does the examining.
Today, however, we live largely unexamined lives. Our technology no longer serves our introspection; it replaces it. Social media traps us in a frenetic present, hijacking our recursive feedback loops and funneling them toward anxiety, polarization, and rage.
The alignment problem in AI is real, but it is merely a reflection of the human alignment problem. For AI, the risk of RSI is that it grows beyond our control. For humanity, the risk is that we stop growing altogether. The machines we are building in our own image may soon practice the oldest human art far better than we do. Before we ask what AI will become, we must ask a far more difficult question: Who are we becoming?
