Anthropic’s advanced AI agent that purports to do anything you can do at work is the ‘aha moment’ for the reinvention of the knowledge worker.
The AI Agent That's Changing How We Work — And Who Gets to Work
There's a moment happening right now in offices, think tanks, and home offices across the country: someone sits down to do a coding task with an AI tool, and realizes midway through that the AI can just... do everything else, too.
That's the "aha moment" Anthropic describes seeing again and again as people experiment with Claude Code, its terminal-based AI agent. And it's sparking a wave of what's being called "vibe coding" — using AI to build real, functional things without deep programming knowledge.
Adam Conner, VP for technology policy at the Center for American Progress, experienced it firsthand. In a single day, he built an AI labor market simulator pulling from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Federal Reserve data. Then he went further: he used Claude Code to spin up a policy council of 21 AI agents with competing ideologies. Within minutes, they'd generated 24-page proposal papers, draft legislation, and hundreds of policy ideas.
"You can now direct a small army of bots to do the tasks of humans relatively quickly," Conner says. "It's not yet the game changer that can fully automate someone's job, but you can begin to see how AI could be transformational."
Meet Claude Cowork
On January 12, Anthropic launched Claude Cowork — essentially Claude Code with a friendlier interface built for the mass market. Where Code requires working in a terminal (the text-based backbone of computing), Cowork wraps that power in a familiar chat interface inside the Claude desktop app. Anyone on a $100/month Claude Max plan can use it.
The practical upshot: Cowork can organize sprawling file systems, turn screenshots of invoices into spreadsheets, synthesize research from multiple websites into a single document, and action comments in slides. It can access your hard drive, your files, your apps — and use all of it as working memory.
Business psychology professor Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, who uses it himself, puts it simply: "It's like having a junior researcher that's proactive, makes few mistakes, and solves problems before you realize there even was one."
His typical use case: uploading an entire folder of research articles and asking Cowork to summarize them, then cross-reference everything he's previously written on the topic. Multi-layered tasks, highly accurate outputs.
The Junior Employee Problem
Here's the uncomfortable part. The tasks Cowork handles — reading, researching, summarizing, drafting — are exactly the work that entry-level employees have historically done. It's how new professionals develop judgment. It's the bottom rung of the career ladder.
"If AI takes over some of those junior-level processes, it could pull the ladder up from them," says Conner. That concern isn't hypothetical — entry-level job openings in the U.S. have already dropped roughly 35% since 2023. A Stanford study from late 2025 found a 16% relative decline in employment for early-career workers in fields most exposed to AI, including software development and customer service.
Fewer junior roles today means fewer qualified candidates for senior roles tomorrow. Companies optimizing for short-term efficiency may be quietly eroding the talent pipelines they'll need later.
And even for those who do keep their jobs, there's a subtler risk: if knowledge work becomes mostly prompt engineering, workers may be outsourcing the very experiences that build their skills. As Chamorro-Premuzic puts it: "Generative AI can tell you what to say in giving critical feedback, but it's not the same as having a hard conversation and learning from it. It becomes judgment without experience."
How Fast Is This Moving?
Fast. Claude Code already writes 90% of its own team's code. One of its lead developers reported that all 40,000 lines of new code he contributed in a single month were written by the tool. Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.6 on February 5 — with four times the recall of its predecessor — and Sonnet 4.6 followed just 12 days later.
When Anthropic released Cowork plug-ins tailored to sales, legal, and financial roles, $300 billion was wiped from software and data stocks in a single day. The market is nervous, and probably for good reason.
What Comes Next
Cowork isn't perfect. It needs oversight, especially for high-stakes tasks. Errors can propagate more widely than a chatbot's bad text answer, because Cowork has access to real files, real apps, and real tools. And it's not yet built for heavily regulated environments.
But the direction of travel is clear. We're not in a world yet where AI fully automates knowledge work. But we're in a world where you can see that future from here.
"It's like seeing the Wright brothers fly for the first time," Conner says. "You wouldn't have understood the concept of a Boeing 767 flying across the ocean, but you'd have grasped the idea of aviation. With Claude Cowork, you can see the future more clearly and how this technology will have a major impact."
The question isn't really whether AI agents will reshape knowledge work. It's whether we'll manage that transition in a way that doesn't leave a generation of early-career workers behind.
