This article is part of our Summer reads series. Visit our collection to discover “The Economist reads” guides, guest essays and more seasonal distractions.artificial intelligence has undergone a revolution. After decades of modest progress that never quite lived up to its promise, a different approach—relying on big data and stats, not clever algorithms—made huge strides in solving real-world problems like voice- and image-recognition and self-driving cars.
In a slim volume, James Lovelock—a British scientist who originated the Gaia hypothesis that the Earth acts as a self-regulating, living organism—predicts how “cyborgs” may help people in the future, notably by keeping the planet temperate so both man and machine can survive. The AI-infused bots will be vastly more intelligent and faster-thinking than humans .
Still MelMitchell1 is worth a read :)
Thanks for your interest, v. flattered, but I'm committed to someone
Evidence of atrocities in Peru🤐
Predictive algorithms based on regression analysis of data - impressive, not humbling.
AI ,the created did not humble the creators but it may human works.
Because people a thick as rocks and are basically obsolete as it is
They want us enthralled to AI... it will be our new God... real Wizard of Oz shit.
Co raz bardziej jestem przekonany że psychologia i Psychiatria, cała medycyna to nauki pozbawione, praw i moralności, wychodzi na to że w takich naukach, jeżeli jest ich więcej i głośno wyją że dzieje im się krzywda to mają racje, czyli okradną cię a potem wyją żeś złodziej.
I want the books AI recommends
I will not read anything your executive editor recommends.
'A lot of books' is still more precise than 95% of the things you say.
No thanks, I am waiting for the book that explains how AI understands/interprets me.