Ep105 "What if AI is not actually intelligent?" (with Alison Gopnik)

Ep105 "What if AI is not actually intelligent?" (with Alison Gopnik)

Is AI an intelligent agent, or is there a different way we should be thinking about it? Is it more like a piece of cultural technology? What in the world is a piece of cultural technology -- and how would re-thinking this change our next steps? What does any of this have to do with the myth of the Golem, printing presses, Socrates, Martin Luther, or the story of stone soup? Join Eagleman this week with cognitive scientist Alison Gopnik for a new take on a new tech.

Episoder(160)

Ep146  "Who Counts as Human in Your Mind?" with Lasana Harris

Ep146 "Who Counts as Human in Your Mind?" with Lasana Harris

When do you view another person like an object? This is what neuroscientists mean when they talk about de-humanization: your brain doesn't crank up its social circuitry to understand the other person ...

23 Mar 1h 7min

Ep145 Why do we compulsively click on ragebait? with Angele Christin

Ep145 Why do we compulsively click on ragebait? with Angele Christin

Do algorithms shape our lives? What did clickbait look like before the internet? Why do journalists start writing differently when metrics are introduced? What does any of this have to do with cooking...

16 Mar 1h 10min

Ep144  "How do things last?" Part 2: Millennia with Alexander Rose

Ep144 "How do things last?" Part 2: Millennia with Alexander Rose

What is a 10,000 year clock? What is the Y10k bug? What allows some organizations to last a millennium? What do ancient ceramics have to do with ball bearings in satellites? What does any of this have...

9 Mar 55min

Ep143 "How do things last?" Part 1: neurons to civilizations

Ep143 "How do things last?" Part 1: neurons to civilizations

What makes things last, and what do very different lasting things have in common? Why might a space alien not be able to understand music? Why do windows in medieval cathedrals look thicker at the bot...

2 Mar 44min

Ep142 "Do breakthroughs require rule-breakers?" with Eric Weinstein

Ep142 "Do breakthroughs require rule-breakers?" with Eric Weinstein

Why do revolutionary ideas so often come from outsiders? Do good scientists sometimes crowd out great ones? Do we still have room for scientific cowboys? And what is the relationship between national ...

23 Feb 1h 32min

Ep141 "What do brains and weather systems have in common?" with Nicole Rust

Ep141 "What do brains and weather systems have in common?" with Nicole Rust

Does brain science need a new grand plan? Is the brain less like an assembly line and more like a weather system? What does this mean for what counts as explanatory, and how might AI help us in the ne...

16 Feb 36min

Ep140 "How does your brain decide what’s true?" with Sam Harris

Ep140 "How does your brain decide what’s true?" with Sam Harris

Why do we believe what we believe? Why is changing our opinions so difficult, and why does a challenged belief so often feel like a personal attack? What if beliefs didn’t evolve to be true, but to be...

9 Feb 1h 20min

Ep139 "What does alignment look like in a society of AIs?" with Danielle Perszyk

Ep139 "What does alignment look like in a society of AIs?" with Danielle Perszyk

Is intelligence a property of individual brains, or is it something that emerges from many brains trying to align with one another? How can we build AI agents to improve our understanding of the world...

2 Feb 58min

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