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Art Keller's avatar

Appreciate that. A lot of people think this kind of philosophical discussion is about a reality that won't exist, or is very far off. If you look at recent surveys like this, a lot of senior business leaders think even they should be be replaced by AI in the not too distant future. https://press.edx.org/edx-survey-finds-nearly-half-49-of-ceos-believe-most-or-all-of-their-role-should-be-automated-or-replaced-by-ai

If their predictions are even close to accurate (or even off by 5 years), what chance do the workers of 2030 have to stay ahead of the curve? Or people at any level to retain autonomy? These are the discussions we need to have now, not before the tech is already embedded everywhere.

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Tim Keller's avatar

I like that you mention the importance of personal agency and free will. If you listen to Dawkins, Hawking, Harris and others, free will is only an illusion. They already claim, based on a materialistic only world view, that we are complex, but don't actually have free will. It is a logical conclusion. The laws of physics dictate everything, how could it be otherwise? Their conclusion is that you are a biological robot, complex, but not free.

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