
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Stuart Russell explores the future of Artificial Intelligence and asks; how can we get our relationship with it right? Professor Russell is founder of the Centre for Human-Compatible Artificial Intelligence at the University of California, Berkeley. In this lecture he reflects on the birth of AI, tracing our thinking about it back to Aristotle. He outlines the definition of AI, its successes and failures, and the risks it poses for the future. Referencing the representation of AI systems in film and popular culture, Professor Russell will examine whether our fears are well founded. He will explain what led him – alongside previous Reith Lecturer Professor Stephen Hawking to say that “success would be the biggest event in human history … and perhaps the last event in human history.” Stuart will ask how this risk arises and whether it can be avoided, allowing humanity and AI to coexist successfully.
This lecture and question-and-answer session was recorded at the Alan Turing Institute at the British Library in London.
4.3
143143 ratings
Stuart Russell explores the future of Artificial Intelligence and asks; how can we get our relationship with it right? Professor Russell is founder of the Centre for Human-Compatible Artificial Intelligence at the University of California, Berkeley. In this lecture he reflects on the birth of AI, tracing our thinking about it back to Aristotle. He outlines the definition of AI, its successes and failures, and the risks it poses for the future. Referencing the representation of AI systems in film and popular culture, Professor Russell will examine whether our fears are well founded. He will explain what led him – alongside previous Reith Lecturer Professor Stephen Hawking to say that “success would be the biggest event in human history … and perhaps the last event in human history.” Stuart will ask how this risk arises and whether it can be avoided, allowing humanity and AI to coexist successfully.
This lecture and question-and-answer session was recorded at the Alan Turing Institute at the British Library in London.
5,395 Listeners
381 Listeners
1,837 Listeners
159 Listeners
7,899 Listeners
316 Listeners
107 Listeners
501 Listeners
1,814 Listeners
1,118 Listeners
2,243 Listeners
868 Listeners
75 Listeners
2,049 Listeners
2,065 Listeners
1,051 Listeners
213 Listeners
59 Listeners
70 Listeners
723 Listeners
2,975 Listeners
3,101 Listeners
894 Listeners
48 Listeners