By Edo Segal
The tool that changed everything was not the one I expected. It wasn't Claude. It was a reed stylus pressed into wet clay five thousand years ago.
I don't mean that literally. I mean that when I encountered Jack Goody's argument — that writing didn't just record human thought but restructured what human thought could be — something shifted in how I understood the moment we're living through. Not the technology. The cognitive landscape underneath it.
I had been thinking about AI as a capability revolution. Faster output. Broader reach. The imagination-to-artifact ratio collapsing to the width of a conversation. All of that is true, and I wrote about it in *You On AI*. But Goody forced a harder question: What if
A reading-companion catalog of the 13 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Jack Goody — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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