Smith considered a market as a benevolent super intelligence. In 1984, Orwell envisioned an organization as a mean super intelligence.
I’ll give you Smith, but I don’t think Orwell had intelligence as such in mind. One of the main things distinguishing 1984′s Ingsoc from non-fictional 20th-century despotism, in fact, was that it didn’t pretend to be an agent, that it didn’t have goals like “conquer the world” or “safeguard the coming revolution”: instead, it was more like a dumb attractor in ideology-space tending towards the undirected exercise of coercive state power for its own sake.
I’ll give you Smith, but I don’t think Orwell had intelligence as such in mind. One of the main things distinguishing 1984′s Ingsoc from non-fictional 20th-century despotism, in fact, was that it didn’t pretend to be an agent, that it didn’t have goals like “conquer the world” or “safeguard the coming revolution”: instead, it was more like a dumb attractor in ideology-space tending towards the undirected exercise of coercive state power for its own sake.
It pretended to be an agent with goals like protecting the people from Eastasia and Eurasia.
Those pretenses were means to the end of the Coercive State Power Maximizer.
And I don’t see how you distinguish Smith from Orwell in terms of intelligence or agency. If anything, I see more agency in Ingsoc than a market.