...have you ever actually used a neural net? I'm not entirely sure you understand exactly what a neural network does. It's not "thinking". It's not "abstracting" in any sense of the word. It's just taking a set of inputs and figuring out whether they yield a positive or negative output (true or false), then alters the weight of each path from node to node based on what was more or less relevant to the conclusion of true or false. It effectively takes from an input and isolates the most relevant details from each piece of data across an entire data sample to yield a proper output for each (when proper output is known), as to be able to figure out the output without knowing it beforehand.
I don't know where you really get abstraction from. At least, not in the sense that you're thinking.
Seriously, they're not magic.
This^
A neural net has an input and an output, that's all that it is. Your AI for inventing random MTG cards isn't going to suddenly understand what a control deck is, much less start questioning the nature of love.
The rule with computers is that its always going to be many times harder to make a computer do something than it would be to do it yourself. The computer may be able to do that thing faster, but its rarely going to do it better than its creator could. A good example of this would be the mutual fund run by an AI (forget the name). All it does is subscribe to every finance magazine under the sun and harvest them for keywords. It might seem like it can out think humans, but its far dumber than a human even at the stock market. What it does is read faster than a human ever could, its understanding of what its' reading is 100x worse than a human's would be. But since no human could read all that text, it can compete from a position of greater knowledge. The stock market (much like a casino) is also a place where emotions and creativity are liabilities instead of assets, hence computers having an advantage.
Think of it in terms of video games. 3D art is nothing more than a computer drawing 2D art at the speed of light. But to get to that point, you need to be able to draw the 2D art. Because its much harder to make a computer draw for you, than it is to draw in the first place. If you couldn't draw the concept art, you can't make a 3D model and rig for your video game character.
So the issue becomes this. In order to make an AI that can think better than a human, you need to be smarter than a human. Not just a little smarter than a human, not just a genius. You need to be like 10x as smart as a human. We ourselves can't (yet?) make an AI that's as smart as an animal. For some definitions of smart, we arguably haven't made an AI as smart as an ant. All we've achieved are AIs that think *quickly*. There is most definitely no hard evidence that AIs are ever going to be truly "thinking" instead of just calculating quickly. That isn't to say that AIs won't come for our jobs. I mean hell they already drive better than we do. But they can do that because they're having google maps and a ton of visual information fed directly into their brains. If I had that and could think at the speed of light, I'd drive well too. So in terms of an AI running the government/world, how do you give it everything? How do you feed a world's worth of contradictory and subjective political information into a computer? Politics isn't like driving or even the stock market, its a much more social and creative field. Not that we would think of it as creative but politics is very much right brain; there's no clear cut solution and you have to cut your own path rather than checking the right multiple choice box. And the rules of politics constantly change as the situation does; there's no way that an AI to run the government 50 years ago would possibly suffice now, much less 200 or 2000 years ago (pretending that wouldn't be anachronistic). So even if we somehow made an effective AI for governing we'd have to let someone modify it, re-introducing the fallible human element. Of course machine learning algorithms could be a scary powerful *aide* to politicians, but you're not going to want to plug something like that into the nuclear silos.