By Edo Segal ^ Opus
The laptop was open at three in the morning and I could not close it.
Not because the work demanded it. The work was done hours ago. What remained was the momentum of a person who had forgotten the difference between building and being alive. I describe this moment in You On AI — the transatlantic flight, the grinding compulsion, the recognition arriving in real time that the exhilaration had drained away and what was left was just the engine running.
I could diagnose myself perfectly. I could not make myself stop.
That gap — between knowing what is wrong and being able to act on the knowing — is not a technology problem. It is the oldest problem there is. And it belongs to a psychiatrist who understood it better than
A reading-companion catalog of the 22 Orange Pill Wiki entries linked from this book — the people, ideas, works, and events that Viktor Frankl — On AI uses as stepping stones for thinking through the AI revolution.
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