The Man Behind The Most Useful Thing AI Has Ever Done
Demis Hassabis won the Nobel Prize for building AlphaFold, the AI system that solved a 50-year grand challenge and gave every scientist on Earth instant access to the structure of nearly every known protein. But that breakthrough was just one block in a much larger tower he's building. As CEO of Google DeepMind, he now controls the AI models millions of people use every day — and he's racing to solve problems from nuclear fusion to drug discovery to the nature of consciousness itself. The question is whether he can keep that tower standing while the world around him demands he build faster, compete harder, and deploy tools that weren't supposed to leave the lab for another decade.
Kernaussagen
AlphaFold solved the protein folding problem and made the 3D structures of almost all known proteins freely available to scientists worldwide, dramatically accelerating research in drug discovery, agriculture, and neglected diseases.
The commercial AI race triggered by ChatGPT forced Hassabis to abandon his ideal vision of careful, deliberate AGI development in favor of rapid deployment — a shift he views as both inevitable and carrying serious medium-term risks around autonomous systems and bad actors.
Move 37 in AlphaGo demonstrated that AI systems can discover genuinely creative solutions no human would find — a capability now being applied to chip design, materials science, quantum computing, and other fields where breakthrough insights could unlock entire branches of progress.
Hassabis worries most about two things the public underestimates: bad actors repurposing dual-use AI for harm, and increasingly autonomous AI agents breaching their guardrails as they become more powerful over the next 2–4 years.
His optimistic vision for the next 50 years includes cracking fusion energy, mining asteroids, curing all major diseases, and bringing human consciousness to the stars — all enabled by AI solving what he calls «root node problems» in the tree of knowledge.
Kurzgesagt
Demis Hassabis believes AI's greatest impact won't be chatbots or image generators, but invisible tools that cure diseases, solve energy problems, and unlock the mysteries of the universe — and he's building those tools right now, even as the commercial AI race forces him to move faster than he thinks is ideal.
The AlphaFold Breakthrough
Solving a 50-year problem unlocked biology for millions of scientists.
Demis Hassabis encountered the protein folding problem as an undergraduate at Cambridge in the late 1990s. A biologist friend described it as «the equivalent of Fermat's last theorem but for biology» — a grand challenge to predict the 3D structure of proteins from their amino acid sequences. Proteins make all of biology possible, and their 3D shapes determine their functions. But figuring out those structures had required shooting X-rays at crystals for years at a cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars per protein. Hassabis recognized it as the kind of problem AI might one day crack, and one that would unlock massive downstream benefits in drug discovery and disease research.
By 2021, AlphaFold had solved it. In a meeting captured on camera, Hassabis realized mid-discussion that the system could fold proteins in seconds — fast enough to process all 200 million proteins known to science in about a year. His team skipped the traditional approach of setting up a server where scientists request individual structures and instead folded everything and released it for free. That decision made the crucial biological data that had taken decades to accumulate suddenly available to every researcher on Earth. The impact was immediate: scientists working on wheat, malaria, and obscure organisms suddenly had access to structural data they could never have afforded to generate themselves.
Today, over 3 million scientists use AlphaFold, and a pharma executive told Hassabis that «almost every drug developed from now on will have probably used AlphaFold in its process.» The team keeps the database updated as new organisms are sequenced. Hassabis points to the nuclear pore complex — one of the body's largest and most important proteins — as his favorite example: within a year of AlphaFold's release, teams used it to finally determine the structure of this massive gateway protein that controls what enters and exits cell nuclei. It was fundamental biology, but the kind that opens doors to future treatments.
Beyond Prediction: The Isomorphic Labs Vision
«It Felt Right»
Go's intuitive nature made it the perfect proving ground.
“When you talk to a Go master, unlike a chess master, they'll tell you things like, «Oh, why did you play there?» They'll say, «It felt right.» Okay, but a chess player will never say that. They would say like, «I did it because I'm calculating this, this,» and then they'll tell you the calculation. So that intuitive feeling is obviously very hard to encapsulate in a system. You can't really program that directly.”
Move 37 and the Dawn of Creative AI
AlphaGo's shocking move proved machines could invent, not just execute.
On March 10, 2016, AlphaGo faced world champion Lee Sedol in a match watched by 200 million people. In game two, it played Move 37 — a stone on the fifth line, early in the game, violating a fundamental rule Go masters teach beginners. The move was so unexpected that Sedol sat with his head in his hands. A hundred moves later, it became clear: that stone was in exactly the right place to win the game. It was not just surprising; it was the critical move, placed with what seemed like preternatural foresight. The move has since changed how professional Go players approach the game.
For Hassabis, Move 37 was the moment he had been waiting for. Unlike Deep Blue, which executed rules programmed by chess grandmasters, AlphaGo learned by playing against itself. It started with human games from the internet, then used Monte Carlo tree search to explore beyond human knowledge. The intelligence wasn't hardcoded by programmers — it emerged from the learning process. That distinction mattered enormously: it meant the system could generalize, discover, create. It was the signal that AI was ready to tackle scientific problems, not just games.
AlphaGo evolved into AlphaZero, which removed all human knowledge from the training process. Starting completely from scratch with only the rules of the game, AlphaZero played 100,000 games against itself, trained a new version on that data, then repeated the cycle. After 16–17 generations — spanning a single day — it went from random play to better than world champion level. Hassabis watched it happen live with chess: random in the morning, better than grandmasters by teatime, better than the world champion by dinner. AlphaZero discovered novel chess strategies that even the best brute-force engines like Stockfish had never found.
The Frontier of Self-Discovery
AlphaGo-style learning now tackles real-world optimization problems.
AlphaTensor Discovered new algorithms for matrix multiplication — the foundation of all neural networks — making training 5% faster and saving billions in compute costs.
AlphaChip Designs chip layouts more efficiently than human engineers by solving the NP-hard routing problem of wiring components with the shortest possible connections.
Materials Design Applies self-play and search to discover new materials with specific desired properties, going beyond what is currently known in materials science.
AlphaGenome Predicts whether single-letter mutations in genetic sequences will cause disease or remain benign, tackling the 98% of the genome that doesn't code for proteins.
GenCast Improves weather prediction by simulating atmospheric dynamics, addressing the Navier-Stokes equations governing fluid flow.
The Question from Jennifer Doudna
Can AI pinpoint the exact genetic cause so CRISPR can fix it?
The World Hassabis Wanted vs. The World He Got
ChatGPT ended the careful scientific approach he had planned.
Demis Hassabis founded DeepMind with a plan: build AGI carefully, scientifically, like CERN. Take decades if necessary. In the meantime, deploy narrow AI systems like AlphaFold to deliver tangible benefits to humanity — cures for cancer, new energy sources, solutions to climate change. He sold to Google specifically because they promised to let DeepMind focus on science, not products. For years, that's exactly what happened. DeepMind pursued moonshots while Google handled consumer AI.
Then ChatGPT launched. OpenAI scaled a transformer-based language model, released it as a research experiment, and watched it go unexpectedly viral. Hassabis admits even he didn't realize people would find it so useful despite its flaws — the hallucinations, the limitations. But they did. Google declared «code red.» Hassabis became head of all Google AI, including the consumer products he hadn't been focused on. The careful, contemplative approach he'd envisioned evaporated. The industry entered a «ferocious commercial pressure race,» compounded by U.S.–China geopolitical competition. Progress accelerated to lightning speed.
Hassabis sees trade-offs in both directions. The benefits: faster progress overall, millions of people getting access to cutting-edge AI within months of its creation, and society gradually normalizing to the technology rather than facing a sudden shock when AGI arrives. The stress-testing from millions of users also builds more robust systems. The costs: the philosophical contemplation is gone, the scientific method rushed, and the world is now locked into competitive dynamics that prioritize speed over safety. He's pragmatic about it — «we have to deal with the world as we find it» — but it's clear this isn't the timeline he would have chosen.
The Two Big Worries
What Governments Should Use AI For
Public health, education, energy, not just surveillance and war.
What Governments Should Use AI For
Hassabis wants governments to apply AI to improving public health, education systems, and energy grid optimization — use cases with enormous societal gain. DeepMind saved 30% of energy used in Google data center cooling systems; similar efficiencies could transform national infrastructure. But he acknowledges these are dual-use technologies, and geopolitics is complicated. Some countries like Singapore and the UAE are leaning into beneficial applications. The challenge is ensuring democratic oversight while racing against adversaries.
The Sci-Fi Future He Actually Believes In
Free fusion energy, asteroid mining, and consciousness among the stars.
Demis Hassabis grew up reading Ian Banks' Culture series, which depicts a post-AGI civilization a thousand years in the future. He thinks some of it could happen in fifty years. The key is solving what he calls «root node problems» — challenges like AlphaFold that, once cracked, unlock entire branches of the knowledge tree. Fusion energy is one. Room-temperature superconductors at atmospheric pressure combined with optimal batteries is another. If AI solves the energy problem — creating essentially free, clean, renewable power — it removes the primary cost barrier to space exploration. Rocket fuel could be synthesized from seawater using fusion-powered desalination plants.
With energy solved, asteroid mining becomes economically viable. Mercury, conveniently made of the right materials and in the right place, could support Dyson spheres capturing solar energy at scale. Humanity would cure all major diseases, extending lifespans dramatically. We would live healthier, longer, and expand into the cosmos. Hassabis describes it as «bringing consciousness to the rest of the galaxy» — maximum human flourishing enabled by AI breakthroughs in the coming decades. He believes it's plausible, not fantasy.
But he's equally candid about the path dependencies. This optimistic future requires navigating the AGI transition safely, which means solving the guardrail problem for autonomous agents, preventing bad actors from weaponizing dual-use technologies, and maintaining international cooperation on safety research. The timeline is tight: the systems are already becoming more capable and autonomous. Whether we get the sci-fi utopia or something darker depends on decisions being made right now, in labs like his, by people balancing scientific ambition against commercial pressure and geopolitical rivalry.
The Central Question of His Life
What can humans do that machines fundamentally cannot?
“I want to use AI as a tool to help us understand the nature of reality around it. I think this journey we're on of building an intelligent artifact will be almost like a controlled study comparison to the human mind, and then I think we'll see in this journey what are the differences and what's unique about the mind. I'm very open-minded about that. I think there could be unique things and certainly unique connections between humans that will never be replicated by these AI systems. But I think a lot of things that we currently think are not in reach — like long-term planning and reasoning and maybe some forms of creativity — I think eventually AI systems will be able to do.”
The Mysteries That Drive Him
Time, consciousness, quantum effects — the big questions remain unanswered.
The Mysteries That Drive Him
Hassabis got into AI thirty years ago not to build products, but to answer the deepest questions in science: What is time? What is consciousness? How does quantum mechanics really work? He's a fan of physicists like Richard Feynman and debates friends like Roger Penrose about whether the brain has quantum effects (neuroscience hasn't found any yet). His ultimate goal isn't AGI itself — it's using AGI as a tool to understand the nature of reality. He's genuinely agnostic about the answers and just wants to know the truth, whatever it turns out to be.
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