Worth knowing Haidt's claims in this book are highly contested and criticised by experts in the field, for overstating the strength of evidence, presenting correlation as causation, etc. (Though certainly there are causes for caution around teens and social media, and u18s and AI where there's a lot we don't know.)
Always feels like there's a weird imbalance with Anthropic. Parts of their policy/social impact portfolio and positioning are meticulously well-researched and carefully couched (e.g. see the economic stuff, and of course their safety/red-teaming work). Other parts seem to reflect strong personal views by leadership with far less care and scrutiny having been applied.
It's ok for leadership personal views to influence company posture. But where those views are affecting activities of a company as central to the field as Anthropic, and as influential on national and international policy as they are & will be, it's important that these positions and the evidence/arguments underpinning them to be subject to robust internal and external debate and scrutiny.