In our era of AI acceleration, it's crucial to pause and consider these innovations' deeper implications on creativity. Ethan Mollick's assertion that "the AI you use today will be the worst AI in your lifetime" is a compelling hook that draws us into a world of endless possibilities with genAI, yet it begs an important question—use at what cost? The implication of generative AI’s impact on society is not just about the environmental footprint or the economic ramifications but about something more profound and personal—the impact on our very way of creative thinking. As we integrate generative AI into our lives, we stand at a crossroads where we could gain and lose simultaneously, reshaping our cognitive landscape in ways we don’t fully understand.
I find chatgpt and generative AI more overwhelmingly as the demon thag will eventually making human thinking irrelevant. This also what Tyler Cowen expects.
I find chatgpt and generative AI more overwhelmingly as the demon thag will eventually making human thinking irrelevant. This also what Tyler Cowen expects.
Is this a good thing?