What AI Is Permitted to Do
256 words, about 2 minutes.
Within Providence's constitutional architecture, artificial intelligence is permitted to perform functions that enhance human coordination capacity without substituting for human judgment about meaning, ethics, and governance. The permitted functions are assistive — they help human participants do things they could do without AI but more slowly, less effectively, or at smaller scale.
Sensemaking assistance: AI systems can process large amounts of information from across the network — governance documents, community reports, ecological data, participant contributions — and identify patterns, connections, and emerging dynamics that would be difficult for any human participant to perceive across the full scope of the network. The AI presents these patterns to human participants; the human participants determine what they mean and what, if anything, should be done about them.
Translation across difference: AI systems can support communication between communities that operate in different languages, that use different conceptual vocabularies, and that have developed different governance cultures. The AI facilitates mutual understanding; the communities make their own decisions about how to relate to each other.
Resource and relationship matching: AI systems can identify potential connections between communities, projects, and participants — resource availability, compatible governance experiments, complementary capabilities — that would be difficult to surface through human networking alone. The AI surfaces the potential connections; the participants decide whether to pursue them.
Governance process support: AI systems can assist in managing the complexity of governance processes — tracking proposals through deliberation stages, flagging procedural inconsistencies, maintaining constitutional audit trails — in ways that reduce the administrative burden on human stewards without substituting for human judgment about substantive governance questions.