
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Should you learn prompt engineering, or maybe a physical trade? There's almost no skill that AI won't eventually surpass, according to neuroscientist Vivienne Ming.
In her new book, "Robot-Proof: When Machines Have All the Answers, Build Better People," she argues humans still have qualities AI can't replicate, like curiosity, social intelligence and a sense of inner purpose. And honing those makes us better partners to AI.
Ming has found in experiments that the most capable form of intelligence is neither human nor AI on its own, but both working together in ways that play to each of their strengths. She calls this the Cyborg model.
By Marketplace4.5
12561,256 ratings
Should you learn prompt engineering, or maybe a physical trade? There's almost no skill that AI won't eventually surpass, according to neuroscientist Vivienne Ming.
In her new book, "Robot-Proof: When Machines Have All the Answers, Build Better People," she argues humans still have qualities AI can't replicate, like curiosity, social intelligence and a sense of inner purpose. And honing those makes us better partners to AI.
Ming has found in experiments that the most capable form of intelligence is neither human nor AI on its own, but both working together in ways that play to each of their strengths. She calls this the Cyborg model.

32,096 Listeners

30,763 Listeners

8,778 Listeners

925 Listeners

1,389 Listeners

1,659 Listeners

2,175 Listeners

5,477 Listeners

112,309 Listeners

56,624 Listeners

9,535 Listeners

10,276 Listeners

3,614 Listeners

6,076 Listeners

6,565 Listeners

6,410 Listeners

164 Listeners

2,997 Listeners

154 Listeners

1,391 Listeners

90 Listeners