wonderful comment thank you! I am impressed with the depth of your analysis and obviously you red this in its seriousness. I love discussing with minds like yours!
I will fully agree that it will and even today is a 100% personal choice. Some choose to eat chocolate all day, others to eat healthy. Some go to the gym and keep in good shape, others don’t. Some waste (or lets say spend) their lives without being curious and keeping very short sight of what is around them.
This talk/transcript of a talk is not anti AI. I am fascinated by the technology and am using it in all kinds of way. It had doubled my curiosity in many areas. Probably you are the same. But I feel there will come a point—maybe in a 100 years—where all will be taken care of. You wake up, no grass to cut, no groceries to buy, no job to go to, no need to drive, repair your fence, houses of build and etc. Many will fall in this trap, others won’t. But I believe is a problem a crisis that we will face.
Probably the phrase that comes to mind from my talk that could fit your argument is
...there will be a balance to hold —
a balance between the power we gain through AI, and the awareness of what that power might
cost us.
...And a choice — between ambition: choosing to grow, even in the shadow of AI — and surrender: stepping back, believing there’s nothing left for us to do...
I like writing things, and I can tell you that to some extend it was demotivating for me to see the LLM write well enough. I give my draft text and tell the LLM, take this and improve it, make it as if Hemingway wrote it.. and it does. A bit sad, a bit discouraging, that we the humans can keep up and create new things. But this could be just a motivator to do better and still write, even if AI can write better. No talking about writing emails...
Hello Viliam,
wonderful comment thank you! I am impressed with the depth of your analysis and obviously you red this in its seriousness. I love discussing with minds like yours!
I will fully agree that it will and even today is a 100% personal choice. Some choose to eat chocolate all day, others to eat healthy. Some go to the gym and keep in good shape, others don’t. Some waste (or lets say spend) their lives without being curious and keeping very short sight of what is around them.
This talk/transcript of a talk is not anti AI. I am fascinated by the technology and am using it in all kinds of way. It had doubled my curiosity in many areas. Probably you are the same. But I feel there will come a point—maybe in a 100 years—where all will be taken care of. You wake up, no grass to cut, no groceries to buy, no job to go to, no need to drive, repair your fence, houses of build and etc. Many will fall in this trap, others won’t. But I believe is a problem a crisis that we will face.
Probably the phrase that comes to mind from my talk that could fit your argument is
...there will be a balance to hold —
a balance between the power we gain through AI, and the awareness of what that power might
cost us.
...And a choice — between ambition: choosing to grow, even in the shadow of AI — and surrender: stepping back, believing there’s nothing left for us to do...
I like writing things, and I can tell you that to some extend it was demotivating for me to see the LLM write well enough. I give my draft text and tell the LLM, take this and improve it, make it as if Hemingway wrote it.. and it does. A bit sad, a bit discouraging, that we the humans can keep up and create new things. But this could be just a motivator to do better and still write, even if AI can write better. No talking about writing emails...
Be well and thanks ! :)
Nik