{"id":146591,"date":"2025-09-16T04:48:07","date_gmt":"2025-09-16T04:48:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/146591\/"},"modified":"2025-09-16T04:48:07","modified_gmt":"2025-09-16T04:48:07","slug":"i-have-to-do-it-why-one-of-the-worlds-most-brilliant-ai-scientists-left-the-us-for-china-china","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/146591\/","title":{"rendered":"\u2018I have to do it\u2019: Why one of the world\u2019s most brilliant AI scientists left the US for China | China"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Song-chun Zhu at Peking University, July 2025. Photograph: Sean Gallagher\/The Guardian<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">By the time Song-Chun Zhu was six years old, he had encountered death more times than he could count. Or so it felt. This was the early 1970s, the waning years of the Cultural Revolution, and his father ran a village supply store in rural <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/world\/china\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" data-component=\"auto-linked-tag\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">China<\/a>. There was little to do beyond till the fields and study Mao Zedong at home, and so the shop became a refuge where people could rest, recharge and share tales. Zhu grew up in that shop, absorbing a lifetime\u2019s worth of tragedies: a family friend lost in a car crash, a relative from an untreated illness, stories of suicide or starvation. \u201cThat was really tough,\u201d Zhu recalled recently. \u201cPeople were so poor.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">The young Zhu became obsessed with what people left behind after they died. One day, he came across a book that contained his family genealogy. When he asked the bookkeeper why it included his ancestors\u2019 dates of birth and death but nothing about their lives, the man told him matter of factly that they were peasants, so there was nothing worth recording. The answer terrified Zhu. He resolved that his fate would be different.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Today, at 56, Zhu is one of the world\u2019s leading authorities in artificial intelligence. In 1992, he left China for the US to pursue a PhD in computer science at Harvard. Later, at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), he led one of the most prolific AI research centres in the world, won numerous major awards, and attracted prestigious research grants from the Pentagon and the National Science Foundation. He was celebrated for his pioneering research into how machines can spot patterns in data, which helped lay the groundwork for modern AI systems such as ChatGPT and DeepSeek. He and his wife, and their two US-born daughters, lived in a hilltop home on Los Angeles\u2019s Mulholland Drive. He thought he would never leave.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">But in August 2020, after 28 years in the US, Zhu astonished his colleagues and friends by suddenly moving back to China, where he took up professorships at two top Beijing universities and a directorship in a state-sponsored AI institute. The Chinese media feted him as a patriot assisting \u201cthe motherland\u201d in its race toward artificial intelligence. US lawmakers would later demand to know how funders such as UCLA and the Pentagon had ignored \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.newsweek.com\/exclusive-pentagon-faces-questions-funding-top-chinese-ai-scientist-1860831\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">concerning signs<\/a>\u201d of Zhu\u2019s ties to a geopolitical rival. In 2023, Zhu became a member of China\u2019s top political advisory body, where he proposed that China should treat AI with the same strategic urgency as a nuclear weapons programme.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Zhu\u2019s journey from rural China to the helm of one of the US\u2019s leading AI labs was both improbable and part of a much bigger story. For almost a century, the world\u2019s brightest scientific minds were drawn to the US as the place where they could best advance their research. The work of these new arrivals had helped secure US dominance in technologies such as nuclear weapons, semiconductors and AI. Today, that era seems to be coming to a close. Donald Trump is dismantling the very aspects of US society that once made it so appealing for international talents. He has shut off research funding and attempted to bully top universities, which his <a href=\"https:\/\/mathstodon.xyz\/@tao\/114956840959338146\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">administration <\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/commentisfree\/2025\/may\/06\/maga-republicans-us-universities\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">views<\/a> as hostile institutions. As US-China tensions have grown, Chinese-born students and professors in the US have faced additional pressures. In a callback to the \u201cred scare\u201d of the 1950s, Chinese students and professors have been <a href=\"https:\/\/apnews.com\/article\/chinese-students-trump-deportations-visas-1820a05254632a3d0fa52ab85f47fe31\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">detained and deported<\/a>, and had their visas revoked.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Even as the Trump administration lays siege to the foundations of US science, it has been trumpeting its plans to beat its Chinese rival in the field of AI. In July, Trump announced the creation of a $90bn \u201cAI hub\u201d in Pennsylvania, as well as a national blueprint \u2013 created in close coordination with Silicon Valley tech leaders \u2013 to dominate every aspect of AI globally, from infrastructure to governance. \u201cAmerica is the country that started the AI race,\u201d Trump said. \u201cI\u2019m here today to declare that America is going to win it.\u201d A month later, China unveiled its own <a href=\"https:\/\/www.gov.cn\/zhengce\/content\/202508\/content_7037861.htm\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">blueprint<\/a>, vowing to fuse AI with the marrow of its economy, from factory automation to elder care.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">At his lavishly funded Beijing Institute for General Artificial Intelligence, Zhu is one of a handful of individuals who the Chinese government has entrusted to push the AI frontier. His ideas are now shaping undergraduate curriculums and informing policymakers. But his philosophy is strikingly different from the prevailing paradigm in the US. American companies such as OpenAI, Meta and Anthropic have collectively invested billions of dollars on the premise that, equipped with enough data and computing power, models built from neural networks \u2013 mathematical systems loosely based on neurons in the brain \u2013 could lead humanity to the holy grail of artificial general intelligence (AGI). Broadly speaking, AGI refers to a system that can perform not just narrow tasks, but any task, at a level comparable or superior to the smartest humans. Some people in tech also see AGI as a turning point, when machines become capable of runaway self-improvement. They believe large language models, powered by neural networks, may be five to 10 years away from \u201ctakeoff\u201d.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Zhu insists that these ideas are built on sand. A sign of true intelligence, he argues, is the ability to reason towards a goal with minimal inputs \u2013 what he calls a \u201csmall data, big task\u201d approach, compared with the \u201cbig data, small task\u201d approach employed by large language models like ChatGPT. AGI, Zhu\u2019s team has recently said, is characterised by qualities such as resourcefulness in novel situations, social and physical intuition, and an understanding of cause and effect. Large language models, Zhu believes, will never achieve this. Some AI <a href=\"https:\/\/garymarcus.substack.com\/p\/gpt-5-overdue-overhyped-and-underwhelming\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">experts<\/a> in the US have similarly questioned the prevailing orthodoxy in Silicon Valley, and their views have grown louder this year as AI progress has slowed and new releases, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/technology\/2025\/aug\/07\/openai-chatgpt-upgrade-big-step-forward-human-jobs-gpt-5\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">like GPT-5<\/a>, have disappointed. A different path is needed, and that is what Zhu is working on in Beijing.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">It is hard, in the current AI race, to separate out purely intellectual inquiry from questions of geopolitics. Where researchers choose to carry out their work has become a high-stakes matter. Yet for some scientists, the thrill of intellectual inquiry \u2013 as well as the prospect of personal glory \u2013 may remain more compelling than the pursuit of national advantage. Mark Nitzberg, Zhu\u2019s friend of 20 years and a fellow classmate back in their Harvard days, was surprised by Zhu\u2019s abrupt return to China. \u201cI asked him: \u2018Are you sure you want to do this?\u2019\u201d Nitzberg told me. Returning, he told Zhu, could make him a \u201cvector\u201d to help China dominate AI. In Nitzberg\u2019s recollection, Zhu replied: \u201cThey are giving me resources that I could never get in the United States. If I want to make this system that I have in my mind, then this is a once in a lifetime opportunity. I have to do it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Nearly everyone who knows Zhu in the west asked me the same question: have you been to his office? Tucked behind Weiming Lake on the north side of Peking University campus, it almost seems built to dazzle visitors. A latticed wooden gate marks the entrance, after which you are led into a courtyard residence that Zhu uses for lectures and seminars. There, his assistants gesture you to the end of the hall, where a back door opens on to a breathtaking landscape of rocks, streams and pomegranate trees. Another courtyard residence can be spotted across the stream, on its own island, accessible via a stone footbridge. That is Zhu\u2019s \u201coffice\u201d.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">One spring morning when I visited, Zhu was admiring his flora, while grumbling that his stream had been muddied by a rain shower the day before. I asked him who was maintaining the grounds. \u201cWe\u2019ve got an entire team,\u201d he said, gesturing to a group of men who had just entered the courtyard. Across from Zhu\u2019s office, on the other side of the stream, is a glass-encased meeting room where he holds court with visitors. We sat there as Zhu began recounting a life spent straddling two superpowers.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Born in 1969, near Ezhou, an ancient river port along the Yangtze, Zhu was the youngest of five children. When he was very young, a wave of intellectuals arrived in his village to be \u201creeducated\u201d, as part of Mao\u2019s nationwide campaign to remould \u201cbourgeois thought\u201d through hard labour. At night, under candlelight and paraffin lamps, teachers, priests and college graduates held salons near the supply store where Zhu\u2019s father worked. Zhu listened as they debated everything from the Soviet Union\u2019s growing involvement in Afghanistan to the US elections. \u201cBy the time I entered elementary school, I felt like I had a good grasp of what was happening in China and the world,\u201d Zhu told me. He knew he did not want to stay in his home town and work in his father\u2019s shop.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">After Mao died in 1976, reformers took over the Communist party and soon scientific education replaced Marx as the new religion. Zhu was the top student at his local high school, and won a place at one of the nation\u2019s best universities, the University of Science and Technology of China (<a href=\"https:\/\/en.ustc.edu.cn\/\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">USTC<\/a>) in the city of Hefei, where he majored in computer science. By 1986, when Zhu began his degree, relations between the US and China had normalised and some of his professors were among the first batch of Chinese scholars sent on state-sponsored visits to the US. They brought back hauls of books to be translated. \u201cAt the time, we saw America as a beacon, a cathedral of science,\u201d Zhu said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Among the imported books was Vision by David Marr, a British neuroscientist who had famously broken down human vision \u2013 a biological process \u2013 into a mathematical framework. Marr\u2019s work suggested that machines might one day be able to \u201csee\u201d the world as humans do. Zhu was hooked. Ever since then, he has dreamed of mapping intelligence \u2013 how we think, reason and exercise moral judgment \u2013 with the mathematical precision of a physicist charting the cosmos. Building an AGI was, for him, not an end goal, but a part of his deeper pursuit: to discover a \u201ctheory of everything\u201d for the mind.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Zhu is known to have cried twice in public over recent years. The first was when recounting to his students the story of his acceptance to Harvard. In 1991, when Zhu graduated from USTC, he was so poor he couldn\u2019t afford the application fees required by American universities. He applied anyway, without paying the fees, though not to the country\u2019s most elite schools \u2013 he didn\u2019t dare. In any case, he was summarily rejected. The following year, one of his professors suggested that Zhu apply again, and that Ivy League schools, which had more money, might not care about the missing application fee. A few months later, he was astonished to receive a thick yellow envelope from Harvard, offering him a full fellowship in the university\u2019s doctoral programme in computer science. \u201cIt changed my life,\u201d Zhu said.<\/p>\n<p>Song-Chun Zhu in the gardens outside his office at Peking University, 10 July 2025. Photograph: Sean Gallagher\/The Guardian<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">The man responsible was David Mumford, a decorated mathematician and Fields medalist who, a few years prior, had begun working on computer vision, a field of AI focused on enabling machines to recognise and process visual information. When Mumford came across an applicant from central China who espoused a \u201ctheory of everything\u201d for intelligence, and cited Marr as his muse, he was captivated. \u201cI was just flabbergasted at his vision and how he was going about approaching AI in this comprehensive way,\u201d Mumford told me. In a 2020 <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=Ty3frN504Bg&amp;t=4s\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">interview<\/a>, Mumford, who became Zhu\u2019s adviser, mentioned the moment he realised he \u201cwas dealing with something special\u201d. Zhu had taken an hour-long exam, but left one question blank. Not because it was hard, but because it was too easy. \u201cHe said, \u2018This is ridiculous,\u2019\u201d recalled Mumford, \u201cbut he answered everything else perfectly.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">During our conversations over the course of this spring, Zhu seemed to associate Harvard with the US he had dreamed of in his youth: an open laboratory where a country bumpkin from rural China could, with enough gumption, make technological miracles into reality. This was the US of Edison and Einstein, the land that welcomed Jewish physicists fleeing Hitler\u2019s Germany and gave them refuge, dignity and labs at Los Alamos. In Zhu\u2019s eyes, it was a country that rewarded intellect and ambition over race, ideology and nationality. At Harvard, he never felt out of place, though occasionally he was puzzled by his new home. On one occasion he asked his classmate Nitzberg why no one picked the apples from the trees around Harvard campus. He thought it was a waste of food.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">It wasn\u2019t until 1997 that Zhu experienced a real culture shock in the US. After completing his doctorate at Harvard and a brief stint at Brown University, he arrived at Stanford to work as a lecturer. He was accompanied by his wife, Jenny, a former classmate at USTC, whom he had married in 1994. At the time, the Bay was bursting with dot-com excitement. Yahoo had recently gone public on Wall Street and venture capitalists were hovering around campus. Two PhD students in Zhu\u2019s department, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, had just created a search engine called google.com. As students flocked to courses on web development, Zhu\u2019s more theoretical classes on pattern recognition struggled to attract much interest. It was a disheartening moment for him. \u201cAt Harvard, it was all about understanding. Their logo was three books,\u201d he told me. But Stanford\u2019s <a data-link-name=\"in body link\">logo<\/a> \u2013 an \u201cS\u201d behind a tree \u2013 looked \u201clike a dollar sign\u201d.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Zhu spent a year at Stanford before moving on to Ohio State University, whose culture he found unambitious and parochial, and then in 2002 to UCLA, where he obtained tenure at the age of 33. That same year, Jenny gave birth to their second daughter, Zhu Yi, and a year later he received the Marr Prize, the top award in computer vision. Colleagues likened him to Steve Jobs for his intensity and intolerance of mediocrity. When I asked one of his collaborators at UCLA about what it was like to work with Zhu, he said: \u201cIt\u2019s as if I\u2019m on the frontlines of a battlefield. We don\u2019t sit down with a cup of coffee and talk about life or our families. That never happens. It\u2019s always just about work and research.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">During Zhu\u2019s 18 years at UCLA, his field went through almost unimaginable changes. For roughly the first half of this period, he was a leading figure in the AI mainstream. Yet in the second half, he became increasingly disillusioned. Speak to different people and they will propose different theories as to why Zhu ultimately decided to leave the US, but there is little doubt that he was influenced, at least in part, by his intellectual estrangement from the field he had once helped shape.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Zhu\u2019s relationship to the so-called \u201cgodfathers of AI\u201d \u2013 figures such as <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/commentisfree\/2024\/oct\/12\/nobel-winner-geoffrey-hinton-is-the-godfather-of-ai-heres-an-offer-he-shouldnt-refuse\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Geoffrey Hinton<\/a>, Yoshua Bengio and Yann LeCun \u2013 is, to put it mildly, complicated. There was a time, however, when they were all roughly on the same page. Drawn to the common goal of making intelligent machines, they saw visual perception as a key problem to crack. Until the late 1980s and 90s, the most popular way to make computers \u201csee\u201d was through hand-coded instructions. To identify a handwritten digit, for example, a researcher wrote detailed instructions to a computer, accounting for each scenario where the lines and strokes matched that digit. This rule-based approach was brittle \u2013 slight variations in handwriting could break the logic.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Then came a series of breakthroughs. In the late 1980s, LeCun, then a researcher at AT&amp;T Bell Labs, developed a powerful neural network that learned to recognise handwritten zip codes by training on thousands of examples. A parallel development soon unfolded at Harvard and Brown. In 1995, Zhu and a team of researchers there started developing probability-based methods that could learn to recognise patterns and textures \u2013 cheetah spots, grass etc \u2013 and even generate new examples of that pattern. These were not neural networks: members of the \u201cHarvard-Brown school\u201d, as Zhu called his team, cast vision as a problem of statistics and relied on methods such as \u201cBayesian inference\u201d and \u201cMarkov random fields\u201d. The two schools spoke different mathematical languages and had philosophical disagreements. But they shared an underlying logic \u2013 that data, rather than hand-coded instructions, could supply the infrastructure for machines to grasp the world and reproduce its patterns \u2013 that exists in today\u2019s AI systems such as ChatGPT.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s, Zhu and the Harvard-Brown school were some of the most influential voices in the computer vision field. Their statistical models helped convince many researchers that lack of data was a key impediment to AI progress. To address this problem, in 2004, two years into his time at UCLA, Zhu and a Microsoft executive set up the Lotus Hill Institute in Zhu\u2019s home town of Ezhou, China. Researchers annotated images of everyday objects such as tables and cups in their physical contexts, and fed them into a big dataset that could be used to train a powerful statistical model. Lotus Hill was one of the earliest attempts to construct the large-scale datasets needed to improve and test AI systems.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">By 2009, however, Zhu was losing faith in the data-driven approach. His Lotus Hill team had annotated more than half a million images, but Zhu was troubled by a simple problem: what part of an image one annotated depended, somewhat arbitrarily, on what task one wanted the machines to achieve. If the task was to identify a cup for a robot to grasp, the handle\u2019s position might be critical. If the task was to estimate the cup\u2019s market value, details like the brand and material mattered more. Zhu believed that a truly generalisable intelligence must be able to \u201cthink\u201d beyond the data. \u201cIf you train on a book, for example, your machine might learn how people talk, but why did we say those words? How did we come to utter them?\u201d Zhu explained to me. A deeper layer of cognition was missing. In 2010, Zhu shut down the institute. He set out instead to build agents with a \u201ccognitive architecture\u201d capable of reasoning, planning and evolving in their physical and social contexts with only small amounts of data.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">His timing could not have been worse. Around the same time, an assistant professor at Princeton named Fei-Fei Li released ImageNet, a larger dataset containing more than 3 million labelled images of common objects such as dogs, chairs and bicycles. (Li had attended a workshop at the Lotus Hill Institute and would later <a href=\"https:\/\/ieeexplore.ieee.org\/document\/5206848\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">cite Zhu<\/a> as one of her influences.) ImageNet was publicly accessible, and its size and relative simplicity enabled AI researchers to test and hone their image-recognition algorithms. In autumn 2012, a neural network developed by Hinton and his team smashed the ImageNet competition, cementing the dominance of neural networks and kickstarting the global wave of AI adoption that continues to this day.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">\u201cJust as I turned my back to big data, it exploded,\u201d wrote Zhu some years later, in a message to his mentor, Mumford. The most explicit clash between Zhu and the neural network school occurred in 2012, just months before the latter\u2019s ImageNet triumph. At the time, Zhu was a general chair of CVPR, the foremost computer vision conference in the US, and that year a paper involving neural networks co-authored by LeCun was rejected. LeCun wrote a furious letter to the committee calling the peer reviews \u201cso ridiculous\u201d that he didn\u2019t know how to \u201cbegin writing a rebuttal without insulting the reviewers\u201d. Even today, Zhu maintains that the reviewers were right to have rejected LeCun\u2019s paper. \u201cThe theoretical work was not clean,\u201d he told me. \u201cTell me exactly what you are doing. Why is it so good?\u201d Zhu\u2019s question gets to the heart of his problem with neural networks: though they perform extraordinarily well on numerous tasks, it is not easy to discern why. In Zhu\u2019s view, that has fostered a culture of complacency, a performance-at-all-cost mentality. A better system, he believes, should be more structured and responsible. Either it or its creator should be able to explain its responses.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Whatever Zhu\u2019s reservations, the ImageNet victory triggered an AI gold rush, and many of the pioneers of neural networks were celebrated for their work. Hinton would go on to join Google. LeCun moved to Meta, and Ilya Sutskever, a co-author of the neural network that won ImageNet, helped found OpenAI. In 2018, Hinton and LeCun, along with Bengio, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.forbes.com\/sites\/samshead\/2019\/03\/27\/the-3-godfathers-of-ai-have-won-the-prestigious-1m-turing-prize\/?sh=1a6327bf549b\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">shared the Turing award<\/a> \u2013 computer science\u2019s most prestigious prize \u2013 for their work on neural networks. In 2024, Hinton was one of the joint winners of the Nobel prize in physics for his \u201cfoundational discoveries and inventions that enable machine learning with artificial neural networks\u201d.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Writing to Mumford, Zhu maintained he had \u201cno regret\u201d about the path he had chosen. But he did feel bitter that Hinton\u2019s team had, to his mind, reaped the rewards of his earlier research. The statistical models and algorithms developed by the Harvard-Brown school in the 1980s and 1990s, Zhu told me, \u201claid the foundation for later deep learning and large language models\u201d. Hinton and his team \u201cdidn\u2019t acknowledge that\u201d, he claimed. A longtime US-based collaborator of Zhu\u2019s, who requested anonymity for fear of US government retaliation, contested Zhu\u2019s interpretation. Zhu deserves more credit, he said, for being one of the earliest advocates of the data-driven paradigm in computer vision, but Hinton\u2019s team devised the algorithms that perfected that approach and enabled it to scale. (Hinton and Bengio declined to comment. LeCun did not respond to requests for comment.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In the mid-to-late 2010s, as neural networks were making startling progress on problems from facial recognition to disease diagnosis, Zhu was reading philosophy \u2013 the Confucians \u201cunderstand the world much better than AI researchers\u201d, he told me \u2013 and working quietly on his cognitive architecture. He was walking a lonely path. In 2019, Zhu served again as a general chair of the CVPR conference. As he read the submitted papers, his heart sank. Nearly all of them focused on squeezing incremental gains from neural networks on narrow tasks. By this time, Zhu\u2019s opposition to neural networks had become visceral. A former doctoral student at UCLA recalled being berated by Zhu several times for sneaking neural networks into his papers. His inner circle learned to avoid forbidden phrases \u2013 \u201cneural nets\u201d, \u201cdeep learning\u201d, \u201ctransformer\u201d (the \u201cT\u201d in GPT). On one occasion, during an all-hands meeting at a LA-based startup Zhu had founded, a new recruit unwittingly added a slide on deep learning to his presentation. According to someone who was present, Zhu blasted him in front of the whole company. (Zhu told me this was \u201cexaggerated\u201d.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">\u201cWhen he has a vision,\u201d Zhu\u2019s longtime collaborator told me, with some understatement, \u201che has a very strong belief that he\u2019s right.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">As Zhu\u2019s ideas were being consigned to the margins of the AI community, the broader climate for Chinese scientists in the US was also growing less hospitable. Tensions between the two nations were rising. In China, Xi Jinping muscled his military into a dominant position in the South China Sea and issued internal party edicts warning against adopting \u201cwestern values\u201d. During Trump\u2019s first presidency, the US designated China as its chief strategic competitor, launched a trade war and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/commentisfree\/2019\/jun\/02\/trump-banning-huawei-beginning-of-biggest-trade-war-ever-united-states\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">blacklisted Chinese tech companies<\/a>. Under Joe Biden, the US maintained a similarly tough approach to China.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Though world powers routinely spy on each other, in recent years US officials have been alarmed by the scale of China\u2019s espionage campaigns. In 2018, the justice department launched the \u201cChina Initiative\u201d, a programme to counter the theft of trade secrets and alleged espionage on US campuses. Critics of the programme claimed that it relied on <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/us-news\/2021\/sep\/15\/abolish-trump-era-china-initiative-academics-urge-amid-racial-profiling-criticism\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">racial profiling<\/a>. More than 100 professors of Chinese descent <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2019\/11\/04\/health\/china-nih-scientists.html\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">were investigated<\/a> for allegedly stealing sensitive technologies. Most who were formally charged had their charges dismissed or dropped, and few were found to have been involved in direct intellectual property theft. The Trump-era effort altered the relationship between Chinese scientists and the US. According to a well-known <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pnas.org\/doi\/epub\/10.1073\/pnas.2216248120\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">academic study<\/a>, return migration nearly doubled for experienced Chinese scholars living in the US after 2018.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">At the end of 2018, Zhu began receiving calls from a reporter at the Silicon Valley news site The Information, asking about a <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theinformation.com\/articles\/huaweis-deep-ties-to-u-s-researchers-face-backlash\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">$150,000 grant<\/a> he had recently accepted from Huawei, the Chinese telecoms giant. That same month, the US <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/us-news\/2019\/may\/15\/donald-trump-national-emergency-telecoms-threats-huawei\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">labelled Huawei<\/a> a national security threat. Zhu told me that the Huawei money came with no strings attached and that he had used it to fund research by his PhD students. Eager to put the matter to rest, he told the reporter that he would not accept any future donations from the company. \u201cRight now, China-US relations are toxic,\u201d he said at the time. \u201cWe are caught in the middle of this.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">As US-China relations soured, Zhu found it increasingly difficult to secure funding for AI research, much of which had previously flowed from the US military. He says he has never been questioned by federal agents, nor has he been stopped and questioned by US border officers about his research and connections to China, though his former PhD students have. After the China Initiative began, according to Nitzberg, some of Zhu\u2019s students became so accustomed to being held up at immigration that they would budget the extra hours at the airport when arranging travel to conferences.<\/p>\n<p>The \u2018China Initiative\u2019 in Donald Trump\u2019s first term as president altered the relationship between Chinese scientists and the US. Photograph: Dmitri Lovetsky\/AP<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In this atmosphere, where China had come to be seen as a direct competitor \u2013 or even threat \u2013 to the US, scientific links to China that had long been seen as normal now came under a cloud of suspicion. Much of this was based on misapprehensions on how academic research actually works, but it is also true that for decades, the Chinese government had encouraged its US-based scientists to return to China, rolling out recruitment initiatives. The most famous of these, the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nature.com\/articles\/d41586-018-00538-z\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Thousand Talents Plan<\/a>, became widely associated with spying and intellectual property theft. In 2024, Mike Gallagher, the chair of the House select committee on China requested documents from UCLA and federal agencies, questioning why Zhu had received millions of dollars of federal funding, despite having allegedly also received funding through the Thousand Talents Plan and having had a \u201crole as a doctoral adviser and researcher at the Beijing Institute of Technology, a prominent Chinese university that has \u2018the stated mission of supporting China\u2019s military research and defense industries\u2019\u201d.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">On my second visit to Zhu\u2019s office, in May, we discussed these allegations. A secretary poured us tea, refilling our cups the moment they were empty. Zhu denied having any affiliation with the Beijing Institute of Technology, but acknowledged he had co-supervised a PhD student from there who worked at Lotus Hill. He also told me that in 2009, while he was at UCLA, his Lotus Hill team had applied for a local talent programme grant from the Ezhou government, which he used to subsidise researcher salaries. (This was not, he said, part of the Thousand Talents Plan. The national programme spawned many local variants that borrowed the label to attract top scholars to their regions.) He added that there was nothing \u201csensitive\u201d about the image annotation work conducted there. The funding, he said, lapsed once he shut down the institute in 2010. As for why he had chosen to locate the institute in China, Zhu cited the same reason as thousands of other American enterprises that had set up in China during these years: labour was cheap.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">It was in summer 2020, in the early months of Covid, Zhu says, that he made the decision to leave the US. He cited his disaffection with the direction of the AI community and the hothouse of American politics \u2013 both its leftwing brand of campus progressivism and the Trump-era national security crusades. There was also a personal factor. His younger daughter, Zhu Yi, is a figure skater who was recruited in 2018 to compete for China in the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics. By 2019, she had become a Chinese citizen and was competing and training with the Chinese team in Beijing.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">At the time he decided to leave, Zhu told me, he did not have any job offers from Chinese institutions. By the autumn, he had been offered full professorships at Peking University and Tsinghua University. Then the city of Beijing agreed to sponsor an AI institute run by Zhu, which would be called the Beijing Institute for General Artificial Intelligence (BigAI).<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">However, two sources familiar with the matter contested Zhu\u2019s timeline. They say conversations between Zhu and members of the Beijing municipal government began earlier \u2013 in early 2018 \u2013 and that these concerned not just his potential move to China but that of his younger daughter. In January 2018, Zhu Yi won the novice title at the US figure skating championship. Not long after, the Chinese Olympic Committee recruited her in the same cohort as Eileen Gu, the freestyle skier. After a few stumbles in her Olympic debut, some online commenters <a href=\"https:\/\/www.reuters.com\/lifestyle\/sports\/figureskating-chinas-us-born-zhu-inconsolable-after-team-event-flop-2022-02-06\/?utm_source=chatgpt.com\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">questioned<\/a> whether Zhu Yi had been a bargaining chip for her father. When I put this to Zhu, he called the online speculation \u201ctotally wrong\u201d and \u201cnot how things work in China\u201d. He acknowledged that he had discussed his daughter\u2019s recruitment with Chinese officials in early 2018, but denied that his return was ever discussed in those conversations. (In February, the Beijing city sports bureau released its 2025 budget, revealing that it had set aside $6.6m <a href=\"https:\/\/www.france24.com\/en\/live-news\/20250226-us-born-eileen-gu-s-training-budget-censored-on-chinese-internet\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">solely to support<\/a> Eileen Gu and Zhu Yi\u2019s training for the 2026 Winter Olympics.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In August 2020, Zhu flew to China on a one-way ticket. Many of his colleagues and graduate students at UCLA did not know he was planning to leave until he was already gone. He had even kept his decision from his older daughter, who was living in the Bay Area. Zhu attributed his secrecy to the politically volatile climate. Trump was referring to Covid as the \u201ckung flu\u201d and hate crimes against Chinese people had soared. I took Zhu to mean that he did not want to be publicly scapegoated for his decision to move. He knew his personal choice carried larger geopolitical weight.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">On the morning that he left the US, Zhu stood outside his house with his suitcase, looking across the sun-bathed hills of Los Angeles. At the edge of the driveway, he turned back and paused to admire his rose garden. It was everything he could have dreamed of as a child, listening to stories of a world beyond his village. Now he was saying goodbye.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">The second time Zhu is known to have cried \u2013 he prefers to say \u201cmoved emotionally\u201d \u2013 was when watching a documentary with his students on the life of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/technology\/2009\/nov\/01\/qian-xuesen-obituary\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Qian Xuesen<\/a>. The Chinese-born, MIT-educated rocket scientist served on the Manhattan Project and helped develop the US\u2019s first guided ballistic missiles. During the McCarthy era, US authorities revoked Qian\u2019s security clearance and kept him under house arrest on suspicion of espionage. No evidence emerged to support such allegations, and in 1955 he was sent back to China in exchange for US prisoners of war. Back in China, Qian led a series of military and technological breakthroughs that helped turn the country into the superpower it is today. Under the \u201cTwo Bombs, One Satellite\u201d programme that he led, China developed the capability to launch ballistic missiles that could strike the US.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In the US, Qian\u2019s story has been <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2025\/05\/30\/opinion\/visas-china-rockets-scientist-technology.html\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">cited as a cautionary tale<\/a> of American self-sabotage, a reminder of how anti-communist paranoia drove away a brilliant mind. In the official Chinese version, Qian was a selfless patriot who willingly gave up a comfortable life in the US to serve his backward country. In the 1980s, Qian was a household name among aspiring scientists like Zhu, and since Zhu\u2019s own return to China, the parallels have been clear. In 2023, Zhu suggested to the Communist party\u2019s top political advisory body that it should treat AI in the manner of the Two Bombs, One Satellite programme \u2013 that is, a top-down, centrally coordinated plan to race ahead in AI research. When I asked him about that proposal, his response was understated. \u201cIn the US, we academics always agreed that we wanted to start a Manhattan Project for AI,\u201d he said. \u201cChina should also have a centralised plan for AI. This is natural, there\u2019s no secret about it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Zhu has started telling Qian\u2019s story to his undergraduates in Beijing, though which version he emphasises \u2013 the scientist betrayed by his adopted homeland or the Chinese patriot \u2013 is unclear. When I asked him whether it mattered who won the AI race \u2013 the US or China \u2013 he paused. \u201cDo I want the Silicon Valley people to win? Probably not.\u201d He wants, he said, the most ethical version of AI to win.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">As we talked, Zhu noted how prescient his departure now looks, given the scorched-earth politics of the second Trump administration. In one <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nature.com\/articles\/d41586-025-00938-y\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">recent poll<\/a>, three in four scientists in the US said they were considering leaving. Many AI leaders, including LeCun, have <a href=\"https:\/\/www.linkedin.com\/posts\/yann-lecun_hey-europe-you-want-a-vibrant-tech-industry-activity-7299096239625695232-ORyx\/\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">spoken out<\/a> about how Trump\u2019s budget cuts to scientific research will harm their work. Chinese universities have capitalised on the exodus, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2025\/06\/04\/world\/asia\/trump-science-visa-china.html\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">courting students<\/a> from Harvard and researchers who have lost their jobs following recent federal budget cuts. (The EU is <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/us-news\/2025\/mar\/25\/europe-universities-us-researchers-trump-administration-science\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">doing the same<\/a>.) In May, Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, threatened to \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/us-news\/2025\/may\/29\/us-revoke-chinese-student-visas\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">aggressively revoke<\/a>\u201d Chinese student visas. And in a revival of China Initiative rhetoric, Republicans have introduced legislation that they say would \u201ccounter China\u2019s malign ambitions to steal American research\u201d.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">It is a common refrain, on the American right, that the US has lost its ambition, the kind once embodied by the Manhattan Project or Apollo missions, and that it is falling behind. Chinese EVs zip through Europe\u2019s countryside and American pharmacies depend heavily on Chinese-made ingredients. China <a href=\"https:\/\/ncses.nsf.gov\/pubs\/nsb202333\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">has<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.nature.com\/articles\/d41586-023-01705-7\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">surpassed<\/a> the US in the number of authored papers in science and technology journals, and that gap is likely to grow. There are four times as many <a href=\"https:\/\/www.csis.org\/analysis\/innovation-lightbulb-not-just-attracting-retaining-international-stem-students\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Stem students<\/a> graduating from Chinese universities each year than in the US. The danger is that in chasing away international talent, the US risks undoing one of the advantages it once had over its competitors. (\u201cMy PhD students at Peking University are at least on a par with those at MIT and Stanford,\u201d Zhu told me proudly.) Openness to the world\u2019s smartest minds is what helped the US establish its lead in the AI race, as well as countless other fields.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">When Zhu left the US, his collaborators feared that his research in China would lose its independence. Zhu, by contrast, has suggested that he feels more liberated to focus on his research in Beijing. Formally, his US-based collaborators were right: there is no separation between the state and research institutions in China. Yet in practice, China\u2019s scientists tend to enjoy considerable autonomy, and if they are working in an area of strategic importance, immense resources can be channelled their way. In the five years since his move to Beijing, Zhu has been offered several hundred million dollars of research funding from Chinese sources, according to two people close to him. The deal with the state is like a long and loose leash \u2013 most of the time it is slack, but it can be pulled, tightened at the party\u2019s whim.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In the US, academics who, in principle, are never leashed, are now feeling a sudden yank from the Trump administration. Billions of dollars in research funding have been paused until universities acquiesce to what the Harvard University president described as \u201cdirect governmental regulation\u201d of the university\u2019s \u201cintellectual conditions\u201d. In March, Columbia University agreed to new oversight of its Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies departments. Tony Chan, the former president of Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and a former faculty dean at UCLA, has experience in both university systems. He told me what he is seeing now in the US is worse than anything he ever saw in China. \u201cWe used to be able to clearly say that US universities were independent of the politicians. That was the advantage of the American academic system,\u201d Chan told me. \u201cI cannot say that any more.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In both China and the US, Zhu has a reputation as a tough academic adviser, with strict intellectual orthodoxies. According to his current students in Beijing, he has a go-to refrain, now immortalised as a gif that circulates in their group chats: \u201cIf you do that again, you will be dismissed!\u201d Zhu is not, in other words, easily swayed. So when OpenAI unveiled ChatGPT in 2022, and much of the Chinese tech sector was stunned \u2013 one Chinese AI founder <a href=\"https:\/\/www.163.com\/dy\/article\/HSST1O660534B9EY.html\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">admitted<\/a> he felt \u201clost\u201d and \u201ccouldn\u2019t sleep\u201d, demoralised by the feeling of being bested again by the west \u2013 Zhu was untroubled. At an AI panel in early 2023, he avoided any praise for ChatGPT as a technical feat. Large language models, he said, \u201cstill fall short\u201d of AGI because they do not \u201chave the ability to understand or align with human values\u201d.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Later that year, Mumford, the professor who Zhu credits with changing his life by admitting him to Harvard, travelled to Beijing to <a href=\"https:\/\/english.cast.org.cn\/fzlm\/syzsxx\/art\/2023\/art_1efcef030c7547fbb01143eda1c20439.html\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">receive a maths prize<\/a>. He was in his 80s and had been retired for nearly a decade. Were it not for the chance to \u201cfind out what Song-Chun was doing\u201d, Mumford told me, he likely wouldn\u2019t have made the trip. The two share a close bond, and used to meet regularly at Zhu\u2019s lab in UCLA. In Zhu\u2019s office at Peking University, there is a framed letter from Mumford to Zhu in which he wrote: \u201cI feel that you are truly my intellectual heir.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A humanoid robot shakes hands with a journalist at the Zhongguancun Forum in Beijing, March 2025. Photograph: VCG\/Getty Images<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">They do not agree on everything, however. While Zhu had largely dismissed neural networks, Mumford came to see something profound in their mathematical structure, and he wanted to nudge his old student to reassess his views. \u201cMore than anything else,\u201d Mumford told me, \u201cwhat I was trying to convey was that I felt BigAI had to have a big team working on deep learning techniques in order to be successful.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In Beijing, Mumford strolled with Zhu through the creeks, willows and paved roads of the Peking University campus, and dined with Zhu\u2019s family. Then Mumford pressed his case. Zhu\u2019s friends and students told me that it appears to have worked \u2013 somewhat. He has allowed his students to experiment with transformers \u2013 the most advanced neural network architecture \u2013 on some tasks. Researchers who once sneaked neural networks into their projects like contraband say they can use them more openly. Zhu is \u201cby far the most brilliant student in computer vision I ever had\u201d, Mumford later told me. And yet \u201cit took him a long time to see that deep learning was doing tremendous things. I feel that was a major mistake of his.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Nevertheless, neural networks will always play a circumscribed role in Zhu\u2019s vision of AGI. \u201cIt\u2019s not that we reject these methods,\u201d Zhu told me. \u201cWhat we say is they have their place.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">One Saturday morning in March, Zhu invited me to an annual tech forum in Beijing where BigAI was showcasing its latest technology. A robot dog pranced around the conference building as onlookers shouted commands (\u201cSit. Sit! I said SIT DOWN!\u201d). Nearby, children clustered around a spindly mechanical arm playing the strategy game Go. Outside the main hall, a humanoid female head with almond-coloured eyes stared blankly into the crowd. When visitors approached, it scanned their faces. Soon, its silicone skin began to twitch, contorting into facial expressions that mimicked theirs.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">At the previous year\u2019s tech forum, BigAI had unveiled a virtual humanoid child named TongTong, who, they hoped, would have capabilities that most AIs lack. Researchers widely agree that commonsense intuitions about how the physical and social world work are among the hardest things for neural networks to grasp. As LeCun recently put it: \u201cWe have LLMs that can pass the bar exam, so they must be smart. But then they can\u2019t learn to drive in 20 hours like any 17-year-old, they can\u2019t learn to clear up the dinner table, or fill in the dishwasher like any 10-year-old can in one shot. Why is that? What are we missing?\u201d TongTong wasn\u2019t ready to practise law, but it seemed to be able to load a dishwasher. It was designed to mimic the cognitive and emotional capacities of a three- to four-year-old child.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">This year, the BigAI team was debuting <a href=\"https:\/\/interestingengineering.com\/innovation\/tongtong-2-0-agi-unveiled-china\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">TongTong 2.0<\/a>, which they claim has the capabilities of a five- or six-year-old. On a large video screen, TongTong 2.0 took the form of an animated girl playing in a virtual living room. At the front of the conference room, a BigAI engineer was going through a live demonstration of TongTong\u2019s abilities. When the engineer asked TongTong to work with her friend LeLe, another AI agent, to find a toy, TongTong appeared to avoid areas her friend had already searched. Later, when TongTong was asked to retrieve a TV remote from a bookshelf that was out of reach, she used a cushion to give herself an extra boost. (When prompting ChatGPT to do similar tasks, researchers have <a href=\"https:\/\/arxiv.org\/html\/2303.16421v2\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">found<\/a> it to be an \u201cinexperienced commonsense problem solver\u201d. Zhu believes that this weakness is not one that deep learning systems such as ChatGPT will be able to overcome.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">For now, TongTong exists only as a software operating within a simulated environment, rather than a 3D robot in the physical world. After the presentation, BigAI announced several partnerships with robotics companies. A crucial test of Zhu\u2019s technology will be whether it can exist as an embodied system and still perform the reasoning and planning he ascribes so much weight to.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Before the presentation, Zhu had arrived at the podium in a blue blazer to deliver a keynote. He began by contrasting his own AI philosophy with what he called the \u201cSilicon Valley narrative\u201d, that AGI could be attained through more data and computing power. The Chinese media, the public and government agencies had been sold a false narrative, one that had spawned a profusion of vacuous Chinese \u201cAI institutes\u201d and inflated startup valuations, as he put it in a written version of the <a href=\"https:\/\/mp.weixin.qq.com\/s\/eHgF3XHlwvND4TU9Q4sbrQ?poc_token=HOrHvWijoYGqLOV6NtAKVT-DknRLBKmaQJ59AS6s\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">speech<\/a> published later. One consequence of this misdirection was that it had convinced the Chinese that they were victims of the west\u2019s \u201cstranglehold\u201d, or kabozi, a term that has come to refer to the US\u2019s export controls to China on high-end computer chips. To Zhu, the key factor holding back AI progress is not insufficient computing power, but a misguided approach to the whole subject. What had started as an academic feud conducted in conferences and peer review journals now seemed to be entangled in an epoch-defining contest for technological supremacy.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Zhu is remarkably consistent in his views, but the way he frames his message has shifted over the years. In his speech, his rhetoric occasionally echoed that of party officials, who issue warnings not to follow the west on issues such as free trade and human rights. China, Zhu said, needed to \u201cresist blindly following\u201d the Silicon Valley narrative and develop its own \u201cself-sufficient\u201d approach to AI. (\u201cThe officials really like how he frames things,\u201d one of his former students told me.) And yet in my four meetings with Zhu, he struck me as more intensely animated by the stakes of his intellectual quarrels than by international competition between the two countries where he had each spent exactly half his life. In service of his ambitions, he had learned to speak the Communist party\u2019s vernacular.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">By the time I left Zhu\u2019s courtyard residence, it was the late afternoon. The sun had slanted below the rooftops, setting the magnolia blossoms aglow in a wash of pink. Zhu accompanied me back to the lattice fence that marked the entrance to his office. He wanted to reiterate that politics was not what was motivating him. \u201cOver the last 30 years, I\u2019ve been focused on one thing. It\u2019s the unified theory of AI. To build understanding. That\u2019s my only drive,\u201d he told me. He brought up his research with Mumford again. \u201cThe Harvard and Brown school\u201d of computer science, Zhu said, proudly. \u201cThat\u2019s what we\u2019re carrying on here.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">This article was supported by a grant from the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.tarbellfellowship.org\/\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Tarbell Center<\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\"> Listen to our podcasts <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/news\/series\/the-long-read\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a> and sign up to the long read weekly email <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/info\/ng-interactive\/2017\/may\/05\/sign-up-for-the-long-read-email\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Song-chun Zhu at Peking University, July 2025. Photograph: Sean Gallagher\/The Guardian By the time Song-Chun Zhu was six&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":146592,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[20],"tags":[256,254,255,64,63,105],"class_list":{"0":"post-146591","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-artificial-intelligence","8":"tag-ai","9":"tag-artificial-intelligence","10":"tag-artificialintelligence","11":"tag-au","12":"tag-australia","13":"tag-technology"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/146591","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=146591"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/146591\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/146592"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=146591"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=146591"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/au\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=146591"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}