By Edo Segal
The sentence that stopped me was not about technology. It was about doing.
Intelligence is not a thing you possess. It is a thing you practice. John Dewey wrote that in various forms across seven decades of work, and I had never encountered it until I was deep into the research for this book. When I did, something clicked that had been refusing to click for months.
Here is what had been bothering me. Every conversation I had about AI — at conferences, at dinner tables, in the quiet panic of a parent asking what their kid should study — was framed around having. Do the machines have intelligence? Will we still have jobs? Does my child have skills that matter? The verb was always possessive. Intelligence as a
A reading-companion catalog of the 28 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that John Dewey — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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