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The Stochastic Parrot & The Human Mind: Are We the Same?

The Stochastic Parrot & The Human Mind: Are We the Same?

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We’re joined by ⁠Ramsay,⁠ founder and CEO of ⁠Mission Control⁠, a leading AI Safety company building trust infrastructure for AI systems where failure is not an option. With a career spanning brain architecture, behavioral engineering, theoretical chemistry, and digital therapeutics, Ramsay has been at the forefront of where technology, innovation, and human flourishing intersect. Now, he and his team are accelerating AI Safety to ensure that synthetic intelligence—humanity’s greatest invention—remains a force for good.

In this episode, we dive deep into the nature of intelligence—both artificial and human. The term stochastic parrot—coined by Emily M. Bender, Timnit Gebru, Angelina McMillan-Major, and Margaret Mitchell in their 2021 paper, On the Dangers of Stochastic Parrots—describes large language models (LLMs) that generate language without true understanding, merely predicting words based on probability. But what if humans aren’t so different? Ramsay brings a provocative perspective: maybe our own cognition is just a more advanced version of predictive pattern-matching.

Together, we explore the future of Responsible AI, the ethical boundaries of intelligent machines, and what the accelerating pace of AI means for the workforce. Will automation redefine the nature of work itself? What safeguards are needed to ensure AI benefits society? And in a world where machines mimic human cognition, what does it truly mean to be intelligent?

Tune in for a thought-provoking discussion at the frontier of AI, ethics and the future of work.

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