You could’ve said the same thing when making the switch from farming to industry. There’s unlimited room in STEM.
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I’d love to talk this through sometime Naval. My fear is that there is a big difference. I might rephrase and say “there may yet be unlimited room in creativity and discovery based areas, but repetitive occupations may be over...even in STEM.” But I don’t know if you’d agree.
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We agree. STEM workers transfer repetitive jobs to software and robots. What remains is creative work and the demand for human creativity, in all facets of life, is unlimited.
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Replying to @naval @EricRWeinstein and
Where is it written that there will always be creative work that is *best* done by humans? And what guarantees that most humans will be able to do that work?
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Replying to @SamHarrisOrg @naval and
As a professional creative person with experience coding, I’d bet on the robots. My internal creative processes feel entirely programmable. Combine that code with rapid audience testing and I’d give human artists ten more years, tops.
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @SamHarrisOrg and
I would take the other side of that bet, if well structured. But of course the bar for creativity (that’s in demand) keeps rising as the tools get better.
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Replying to @naval @SamHarrisOrg and
What creative field do you think will not be dominated by AI in ten years?
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Replying to @ScottAdamsSays @naval and
Fresh Creative Direction. Humans will beat AI in original thinking and art for as far as the eye can see. No AI Picasso on the horizon. Yet.
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