The conversation about the #humanities at the center of AI was the theme of my 2017 book, The Fuzzy and the Techie. Nearly 8 years after writing it, these debates are still central to the narrative of how we leverage technology to solve human problems, and the relevance of broad based skills taught in the #liberalarts are not going away. The coding languages of the future will be English, and Chinese, as Reid Hoffman said recently on Elad Gil and Sarah Guo’s great podcast. What’s important are the critical thinking skills to ask the hard questions. As Voltaire once said, judge a person by their questions, not by their answers. We need more smart questioners, not more folks trying to predict the answers. #artificialintelligence #ai #symsys #symbolicsystems
Delve into the dynamic intersection of technology and humanity with Scott Hartley, Co-Founder of Everywhere Ventures, in our latest "Deep Dive" podcast hosted by Joe Haslam from IE Business School.🎙️ Uncover the profound role of humanities in AI as Scott navigates the synergy between tech expertise and human-centric thinking. Gain exclusive insights from this visionary bridging the gap between technology and the essence of humanity, calling all forward-thinking professionals! Explore the nexus of tech and humanity with Scott Hartley, reshaping your understanding of #AI and its transformative role in our shared future. Tune in now for a captivating episode with Cloud District that promises to broaden your perspective on the future of #technology! 🚀 https://lnkd.in/dx6-FCWY
Scott Hartley Really interesting , yeah indeed, the complex problem-solving, critical thinking, and creativity are among the top skills needed for the future workforce.
So ahead of it!!
Nice!
Your delightful book is the reason why we met in India 😊
Strategic Communications Partner to Series B-IPO CEOs in AI and Deep Tech | $850 million raised by clients | Former Trial Lawyer
10moGrateful every day for my history degree from Haverford College, the thesis I wrote, and my legal education. It’s made it possible to see language as the key to unlocking these technologies. Now I need to pick up your book and read it Scott Hartley