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In this episode, we explore a powerful idea emerging from recent digital health research: artificial intelligence may not be artificial at all. Instead, it may be organic intelligence, human knowledge, judgment, and patterns flowing through inorganic machines.
Using the lens of law and justice, we examine why the future of AI should not be about faster decisions or smarter verdicts, but about learning when to pause. What if AI systems didn’t replace human judgment, but helped surface uncertainty, highlight overlooked patterns, and slow us down when consequences truly matter?
This episode reframes intelligence itself away from machines versus humans, and toward organization, responsibility, and care. A conversation for founders, technologists, and thinkers who believe the future of AI lies not in domination, but in augmentation of human wisdom.
By ThabasviniIn this episode, we explore a powerful idea emerging from recent digital health research: artificial intelligence may not be artificial at all. Instead, it may be organic intelligence, human knowledge, judgment, and patterns flowing through inorganic machines.
Using the lens of law and justice, we examine why the future of AI should not be about faster decisions or smarter verdicts, but about learning when to pause. What if AI systems didn’t replace human judgment, but helped surface uncertainty, highlight overlooked patterns, and slow us down when consequences truly matter?
This episode reframes intelligence itself away from machines versus humans, and toward organization, responsibility, and care. A conversation for founders, technologists, and thinkers who believe the future of AI lies not in domination, but in augmentation of human wisdom.