| ▲ | trhway 2 hours ago | |||||||
>The medium shapes the message and induces behaviours from us. Basically the Homo Sapiens history is the history of making and using tools. That is for example how we got the hands we've got, and our social organization was shaped by agriculture and later by the mass production and now more and more by information technology with AI becoming the major part of it. >I am also afraid that it will create a worse future than the one that we had until now. were hunters-gatherers better of worse than agricultural village dwellers? There is no clear answer. I feel that each stage of the progress made our lives better while some people want "back to the caves" though i think they probably never spent a night under open skies. >I think deployment should slow down and research should be financed and diversified. You can't slow down it in all countries at the same time. And thus slowing down it in any given country would just put that country behind. | ||||||||
| ▲ | WelkinFolk 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
But doesn't this argument presume that every technology must be adopted with as much zeal as possible. That every tool is good for the future of human race. Should we not question the technologies that we so readily adopt? I'm not against AI as a whole, and as Torvalds said, "genie is out of the bottle now", but does this mean that any effort to question or regulate technology translates to "primitivism", or is it just pragmatic to do so? | ||||||||
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