In February 2026, Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, issued one of the most consequential public warnings in the history of artificial intelligence research, comparing AI’s imminent societal impact to a tsunami—vast, swift, and critically underestimated. This paper conducts a systematic analysis of Amodei’s claims, contextualizing them within current empirical evidence on AI-driven labour displacement, the recursive acceleration of model development, and the emerging energy-infrastructure crisis. Drawing on data from the World Economic Forum, the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), the International Energy Agency (IEA), and leading labour-market research, the paper argues that the tsunami metaphor accurately captures three structural discontinuities: The inversion of automation risk—from manual to cognitive labour; The onset of recursive model improvement, whereby AI systems accelerate their own development; and An energy paradox, in which the computational demands of large-scale AI threaten the stability of national grid infrastructures. The paper further proposes a conceptual framework for human adaptation centred on the role of the intelligence curator—a professional archetype defined by synthesis, judgment, and orchestration of AI agents rather than direct knowledge production. Finally, the study discusses policy implications for workforce transition, regulatory governance, and energy-system planning, framing them as key domains for mitigating the turbulence of the AI transformation.
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Zen Revista
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Zen Revista (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69aa7087531e4c4a9ff5a5e0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18856279