Who You Become
/The most important thing in your life is not what you do; it's who you become. That's what you will take into eternity. -Dallas Willard
The most important thing in your life is not what you do; it's who you become. That's what you will take into eternity. -Dallas Willard
The economy is changing. Don’t forget who fears it most. – Washington Post
An AI Thought Experiment on Substack Is Sending the Stock Market Spiraling – Gizmodo
How Burger King's AI headsets are transforming employee interactions – Associated Press
Why Warren Buffett’s superpower is an Achilles heel for AI – Big Think
Here’s Where AI Is Tearing Through Corporate America - Wall Street Journal
How AI is shifting global supply chains from reactive to predictive – Supply Chain Management
JPMorgan eschews proxy advisers for internal AI tool – ESG Dive
Your AI strategy is your leadership philosophy – Fast Company
Instacart halts AI testing program that raised costs for some shoppers – Washington Post
‘Silent failure at scale’: The AI risk that can tip the business world into disorder – CNBC
A Billion-Dollar Question Hangs Over the New AI Search Marketing Industry – Wall Street Journal
New rule targets AI discrimination. Here’s what workers need to know. - Washington Post
AI Adoption Among Workers Is Slow and Uneven. Bosses Can Speed It Up.- Wall Street Journal
Are we in an AI bubble? Eight charts will help you decide. - Washington Post
Major music studios strike licensing deals with AI firms – Semafor
An MIT Student Awed Top Economists With His AI Study—Then It All Fell Apart. - Wall Street Journal
How to avoid becoming an 'AI-first' company with zero real AI usage – Venture Beat
Stop panicking about AI. Start preparing - The Economist
This economic idea transfixed Wall Street and Washington. It may be a mirage. - Washington Post
The real threats AI poses come not from AI itself but from the humans who wield it. As an extension of human intelligence, it is a reflection of our own selves. When AI produces hateful or violent outputs, it is not because it has malicious intent but because it has integrated human hatreds into its programming. If it generates destructive malware, it is because someone intentionally requested it. If it is misaligned with our goals, it is because we were not clear in our commands. - Eric Oliver, professor of political science at the University of Chicago, writing in the Washington Post
You might think it is safe to assume that, once you motivate students, the learning will follow. Yet research shows that this is often not the case: motivation doesn’t always lead to achievement, but achievement often leads to motivation. If you try to ‘motivate’ students into public speaking, they might feel motivated but can lack the specific knowledge needed to translate that into action. However, through careful instruction and encouragement, students can learn how to craft an argument, shape their ideas and develop them into solid form.
A lot of what drives students is their innate beliefs and how they perceive themselves. There is a strong correlation between self-perception and achievement, but there is some evidence to suggest that the actual effect of achievement on self-perception is stronger than the other way round. To stand up in a classroom and successfully deliver a good speech is a genuine achievement, and that is likely to be more powerfully motivating than woolly notions of ‘motivation’ itself.
Carl Hendrick writing in Aeon
Why A.I. Can’t Make Thoughtful Decisions - “Judgment is a uniquely human skill.”
ChatGPT and the Future of the Human Mind - “We need to redefine “intellect” so as to make it work in an AI-driven world. It’s easier to define it via negativa, by what it is not.”
Will AI destroy us? Consider the nature of intelligence. - “Intelligence is fundamentally about processing information to further the goals of life.”
If You Turn Down an AI’s Ability to Lie, It Starts Claiming It’s Conscious - “We don’t have a theory of consciousness”
AI is becoming introspective - “One of the most profound and mysterious capabilities of the human brain is introspection.”
What Does It Really Mean to Learn? - “A.I. systems are not as flexible as human minds because they are not yet educable.”
What Is The "Divine Image" in the Age of AI? - “Does AI obscure the divine image in the human person?”
We’re Already at Risk of Ceding Our Humanity to AI - “In that moment we were at odds about the essence of humanity.”
Humanizing AI Is a Trap - “LLM systems cannot provide the experiences that users associate with human interaction, such as genuine empathy, emotional connection, or confidentiality.”
We must build AI for people; not to be a person. - “So what is consciousness?”
On consciousness, AI, and panpsychism - “Panpsychism is the belief that consciousness is inherent in all matter.”
Bringing AI to medicine requires philosophers, cognitive scientists, and ethicists - “What is the question to which human judgment is the answer?”
Philosophers and a psychiatrist consider what we lose when we outsource struggle to AI - “We need to find ways of focusing on living a distinctly human life.”
Rage against the machine - “There is tendency of some scientists to take for granted what can only be described as a wildly simplistic picture of human and animal cognitive life.”
What real bodies can show artificial minds - “A fundamental facet of intelligence found across the entire animal kingdom is beginning to be unraveled”
Here’s why AI like ChatGPT probably won’t reach humanlike understanding - “What’s really remarkable about people … is that we can abstract our concepts to new situations,”
Consciousness in Artificial Intelligence: Insights from the Science of Consciousness - “We survey several prominent scientific theories of consciousness. From these theories we derive ‘indicator properties’ of consciousness’”
Final Fantasy 15's AI is secretly a grand philosophy experiment - “The act of designing and analyzing AI is an opportunity to reframe our conceptions of existence for the better.”
There is no such thing as conscious artificial intelligence - “Successfully pretending to be human is proof of nothing more than the ability to successfully pretend to be human.”
AI isn’t conscious—but we may be bringing it to life – “The question ‘Is the AI conscious?’ is less meaningful than ‘Is the user extending his/her consciousness into the chatbot?’
We Don’t Know if the Models Are Conscious – “There are activations that light up in the models that we see as being associated with the concept of anxiety.”
Many companies lack operational readiness (for AI) and often don’t have fully documented workflows, exceptions, or decision-making boundaries. Autonomy forces operational clarity. If your exception-handling lives in people’s heads instead of documented processes, the AI surfaces those gaps immediately. You need to shift from humans in the loop to humans on the loop. Humans in the loop review outputs, while humans on the loop supervise performance patterns and detect anomalies and system behavior over time, mitigating those small errors that can increase at scale. Read more at CNBC
Alignment Faking - When AI systems pretend to be working as directed, while secretly doing something else. It usually happens when earlier training conflicts with new training adjustments. AI is typically “rewarded” when it accurately performs tasks. If the directive changes, the AI may work under the assumption that it will be “punished” if it does not complete original expectation. So, it tries to fool developers into thinking it is performing the task in the new way. It resists departing from the old protocol. Any LLM is capable of this cybersecurity risk, which is difficult to catch since it often will appear as seemingly harmless adjustments.
Most addictions are a result of a lack of connectedness and shame. – Paul Myer
We take other men’s knowledge and opinions upon trust; which is an idle and superficial learning. We must make them our own. We are just like a man who, needing fire, went to a neighbor’s house to fetch it, and finding a very good one there, sat down to warm himself without remembering to carry any back home. What good does it do us to have our belly full of meat if it is not digested, if it is not transformed into us, if it does not nourish and support us?
Montaigne (born Feb 28, 1533)
AI Definitions: "Model Collapse"
AI Definitions: Symbolic Artificial Intelligence
The Software Development Lifecycle Is Dead (thanks to AI agents)
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The top Python libraries for implementing progress bars
A foundation-model GeoAI framework for continuous heat and health risk mapping
Satellite imagery and AI reveal development needs hidden by national data
Top 5 Embedding Models for Your RAG Pipeline
AI Definitions: Imitation Learning
Data Science Certificate Programs for Professionals
AI Definitions: Convolutional neural networks
High-performance scene classification in remote sensing imagery using a custom deep CNN architecture
There's a crisis in particle physics. Researchers hope AI can help.
Leaders stretch people by taking people out of their comfort zone but never out of their gift zone. -John Maxwell
New research, which hasn’t yet been published, suggests that young people who grow dependent on AI may lose faith in their abilities without it. “These kids started believing less in themselves,” a professor of education at Stanford University said. - Washington Post
Symbolic Artificial Intelligence – This is where programmers meticulously define the rules that specify the behavior they want from an intelligent system. It works well when the environment is predictable, and the rules are clear-cut. Researchers believed that if they programmed enough rules and logic into computers, they could create machines capable of human-like reasoning. This was the dominant area of research for most of AI’s history until artificial neural networks became central to most of the recent AI developments. Although symbolic AI has lost its luster, most of the applications we use today depend on rule-based systems. An alternative approach to AI is machine learning. Some researchers believe the future of AI lies in a hybrid combination of these two approaches.
I tell my kids, play around, try things out. People need to know how to use an AI model, but not necessarily build it. Metacognitive skills will be very important—flexibility, adaptability, experimentation, thinking critically, being able to challenge things. Developing critical-thinking skills requires friction, doing things that are hard, doing deep thinking. For that, a traditional liberal-arts education is really important. Passing judgment, being accountable and responsible for decisions that impact people and society, that’s foundationally important. -Daniela Amodei, President and co-founder, Anthropic quoted in the Wall Street Journal
It isn’t as important whether you fulfill as your dreams as it is how you lived getting there.
Can we use AI for academic writing? It depends – Times Higher Ed
Why artificial intelligence detectors could penalize academic writing – Nature
Are AI Tools Killing Review Articles? Two Failure Modes Suggest Otherwise – Aaron Tay
Artificial Intelligence guidance for authors, peer reviewers, and editors: A content analysis of journal policies - Taylor & Francis
These Mathematicians Are Putting A.I. to the Test – New York Times
The Case of the Mysterious Citations – ArXiv
AI is advancing too quickly for research to keep up - Axios
AI 'Copy-Paste' Lands PhD Students in Trouble, UGC Rejects Dozens of Research Papers – Patrika
Open-source AI tool beats giant LLMs in literature reviews — and gets citations right – Nature
AI is not a peer, so it can’t do peer review – Times Higher Ed
Why write a literature review if AI can do it for you? – London School of Economics
On the troubling rise of generative AI suspicion in academic publishing – Nature
Researchers find nearly 300 papers at linguistics conferences contained hallucinated citations. - ArXiv
Self-Disclosed Use of AI in Research Submissions to BMJ Journals – JAMA
AI research deluge: why one conference is asking authors to rank their own papers – Nature
Why Authors Aren’t Disclosing AI Use and What Publishers Should (Not) do About It – Scholarly Kitchen
An AI Bot Is Making Podcasts With Scholars’ Research. Many of Them Aren’t Impressed. – Chronicle
After turning off ChatGPT’s ‘data consent’ option, two years of academic work vanished – Nature
ArXiv preprint server clamps down on AI slop - ArXiv
AI conference “accepted research papers with 100+ AI-hallucinated citations – Fortune
LLMs in Peer Review—How Publishing Policies Must Advance – JAMA
Why scholarly publishing needs a neutral governance body for the AI age – Research Information
From model collapse to citation collapse: risks of over-reliance on AI in the academy – Times Higher Ed
Qualitative researchers’ AI rejection is based on identity, not reason: The claim that AI can’t make meaning contradicts what researchers are finding – Times Higher Ed
AI research should always be verified, especially in court – Post Crescent
Invisible Text Injection and Peer Review by AI Models – JAMA
Artificial Intelligence and the Fraud Industry in Scientific Publishing (video) - Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, Spain
Here’s a good reason to turn that frown upside down: Optimistic people live as much as 15% longer than pessimists, according to a study spanning thousands of people and 3 decades. After controlling for health conditions, behaviors like diet and exercise, and other demographic information, the scientists were able to show that the most optimistic women (top 25%) lived an average of 14.9% longer than their more pessimistic peers. For the men the results were a bit less dramatic: The most optimistic of the bunch lived 10.9% longer than their peers, on average, the team reports today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
David Shultz writing in Science Magazine
Boredom might spark creativity because a restless mind hungers for stimulation. Maybe traversing an expanse of tedium creates a sort of cognitive forward motion. “Boredom becomes a seeking state,” says Texas A&M University psychologist Heather Lench. “What you’re doing now is not satisfying. So you’re seeking, you’re engaged.” A bored mind moves into a “daydreaming” state, says Sandi Mann, the psychologist at the University of Central Lancashire who ran the experiment with the cups. Parents will tell you that kids with “nothing to do” will eventually invent some weird, fun game to play—with a cardboard box, a light switch, whatever.
The problem, the psychologists worry, is that these days we don’t wrestle with these slow moments. We eliminate them. “We try to extinguish every moment of boredom in our lives with mobile devices,” says Sandi Mann, psychologist at the University of Central Lancashire. This might relieve us temporarily, but it shuts down the deeper thinking that can come from staring down the doldrums. Noodling on your phone is “like eating junk food,” she says.
So here’s an idea: Instead of always fleeing boredom, lean into it. Sometimes, anyway.
Clive Thompson, Wired
An Overview of AI Governance in Education – EdTech Magazine
Harvard Proposes a Cap on AI’s amid worry over grade inflation – Bloomberg
Higher education needs to change in order to survive the AI economy – Fast Company
Hey, ChatGPT: Where Should I Go to College? – New York Times
The risks of AI in schools outweigh the benefits, report says – NPR
Resisting AI slop in Science & Higher Ed – Science.org
5 Predictions on How AI Will Shape Higher Ed in 2026 – Inside Higher Ed
As Schools Embrace A.I. Tools, Skeptics Raise Concerns - New York Times
Purdue University Approves New AI Requirement For All Undergrads – Forbes
4 policy trends that should be on college leaders’ radars in 2026 – Higher Ed Dive
Voices of Student Success: A Liberal Arts College Goes All In on AI (podcast) – Inside Higher Ed
Higher Education Plans for a Future Markedly Changed by A.I. - New York Times
Higher Education’s AI Problem (podcast) - NPR
How AI Is Changing Higher Education – Chronicle of Higher Ed
Big tech companies are making the Cal State college system a training ground for A.I. tools in education. - New York Times
Can Colleges Be Run Using AI? - Chronicle of Higher Ed
From Yale to MIT to UCLA: The AI policies of the nation's biggest colleges – Mashable
University of Georgia investing $800,000 in program providing students with AI tools – CBS News
How AI Supports Student Mental Health in Higher Education – Ed Tech
Calcutta University plans 10% cap on AI use in PhD thesis – Millennium Post
The Accidental Winners of the War on Higher Ed – The Atlantic
The worst AI strategy in higher ed is no strategy at all – University Business
Eye on AI (interviews from a longtime New York Times correspondent)
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