Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence
Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence
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The Wild West of Energy
What are the current trends in energy production? And how are the energy policies in the western states impacting production and energy market structures? Cole Smead moderates a discussion with Kent Walter, Jonathan Lesser, and Mark Mills which sheds light on the need for a balanced approach to energy policy, technological innovation, and market adaptability.
Cole Smead, CEO of Smead Capital Management, is a board member of Discovery Institute
Kent Walter is Director of Western Market Affairs at Arizona Public Service
Jonathan Lesser is Senior Fellow at Discovery Institute and President of Continental Economics
Mark Mills is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Texas Public Policy Foundation
More about COSM 2024: cosm.tech/
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The mission of the Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence at Discovery Institute is to explore the benefits as well as the challenges raised by artificial intelligence (AI) in light of the enduring truth of human exceptionalism. People know at a fundamental level that they are not machines. But faulty thinking can cause people to assent to views that in their heart of hearts they know to be untrue. The Bradley Center seeks to help individuals-and our society at large-to realize that we are not machines while at the same time helping to put machines (especially computers and AI) in proper perspective. For more about the Bradley Center visit centerforintelligence.org/.
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มุมมอง: 184

วีดีโอ

Accelerating the Endless Frontier
มุมมอง 146วันที่ผ่านมา
Thomas Lehrman discusses the role of research and development (R&D) in the U.S., framed within historical, current, and potential future contexts. Exploring historical and current successes and challenges, he argues for decentralizing R&D funding by using block grants and encouraging state-level innovation in funding mechanisms, similar to charter school and scholarship tax credit models. Thoma...
AI and the Cloud
มุมมอง 160วันที่ผ่านมา
Bryan Mistele and Swami Sivasubramanian discuss AI's role in cloud technology and Amazon's strategic involvement in the field, surveying AI’s utility in such areas as transportation, healthcare, finance, and customer service. Bryan Mistele is CEO and co-founder of transportation analytics company INRIX. Swami Sivasubramanian is VP of Amazon Web Services (AI/Data). More about COSM 2024: cosm.tec...
Will We Be Haunted by a Non-Hallucinatory AI?
มุมมอง 181วันที่ผ่านมา
Lloyd Watts discusses the significant challenge posed by hallucinations in large language models (LLMs), such as ChatGPT. While these models often generate fluent and useful responses, they occasionally produce incorrect or misleading information, referred to as "hallucinations." Watts highlights that this problem, acknowledged by major tech companies like Google, remains unsolved despite their...
The Graphene Moment
มุมมอง 1Kวันที่ผ่านมา
Jim Tour highlights a groundbreaking method called flash graphene, a process that converts carbon-based materials, including waste, into valuable graphene at low cost and high efficiency. The technology promises a cost-effective, scalable solution for waste management, resource recovery, and advancing material science. Walt De Heer discusses his work on epitaxial graphene, a material made by gr...
COSM 2024 Hailed the New American Century
มุมมอง 152หลายเดือนก่อน
COSM is an exclusive national summit on the converging technologies remaking the world as we know it. For decades, George Gilder has written presciently about the technological revolutions shaping our world, from the microchip in Microcosm, broadband in Telecosm, and the cryptocosm in Life After Google. COSM 2024 will hail the New American Century: exploring a technological transformation and r...
Room at the Top for Intelligence | COSM 2024
มุมมอง 1082 หลายเดือนก่อน
COSM is an exclusive national summit on the converging technologies remaking the world as we know it. For decades, George Gilder has written presciently about the technological revolutions shaping our world, from the microchip in Microcosm, broadband in Telecosm, and the cryptocosm in Life After Google. COSM 2024 will hail the New American Century: exploring a technological transformation and r...
Real Intelligence in the New American Century | COSM 2024
มุมมอง 1432 หลายเดือนก่อน
COSM is an exclusive national summit on the converging technologies remaking the world as we know it. "Emancipated from a blinding mirage of mandates and manacles, we will discover a real intelligence distributed as widely as human minds, rather than an AI concentrated in huge data mines," says George Gilder. "A new science of “topology” with five Nobel Prizes can even transform our political w...
Bill Dembski COSM 2023 Interview
มุมมอง 3997 หลายเดือนก่อน
Backstage at COSM 2023, Discovery Institute Senior Fellow Jay Richards interviews Bill Dembski, Senior Fellow at Discovery Institute and author of Being as Communion: A Metaphysics of Information (2014), about the limits and possibilities of artificial intelligence, the philosophical questions AI provokes, and his experience with ChatGPT. The mission of the Walter Bradley Center for Natural and...
Dorothy Li COSM 2023 Interview
มุมมอง 917 หลายเดือนก่อน
Backstage at COSM 2023, Discovery Institute Senior Fellow Jay Richards interviews Dorothy Li, founder of Luminent AI, about the technological innovations in transportation, particularly how AI can improve trucking efficiency. The mission of the Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence at Discovery Institute is to explore the benefits as well as the challenges raised by arti...
Cathie Wood: Converging Technologies Remaking Our World
มุมมอง 26K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
Cathie Wood, CEO of Ark Invest, reviews trends and investment opportunities in technologies related to public blockchains, multiomic sequencing, energy storage, and robotics, that are tied together by advances in artificial intelligence. Learn more about COSM2024 at cosm.tech. The mission of the Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence at Discovery Institute is to explore t...
Reasonable Energy: Pragmatic Solutions to Our Energy Needs
มุมมอง 1.3K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
Mark Mills, Senior Fellow at Manhattan Institute, leads a discussion with Todd Myers, Director of the Washington Policy Center’s Center for the Environment, and Michael Shellenberger, Author of Apocalypse Never, about reasonable and pragmatic approaches to meeting future energy needs. Learn more about COSM2024 at cosm.tech. The mission of the Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Int...
Carver Mead: COSM 2023 Day 2 Closing Remarks
มุมมอง 2627 หลายเดือนก่อน
Carver Mead, computer pioneer and 2022 Kyoto Prize recipient, reflects on Day 2 of COSM 2023, touching upon AI as a great tool and the ramifications of quantum mechanics and the Heisenberg uncertainty principle on the ability to understand cause and effect. Learn more about COSM2024 at cosm.tech. The mission of the Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence at Discovery Insti...
Carver Mead: COSM 2023 Closing Remarks
มุมมอง 1987 หลายเดือนก่อน
Carver Mead, computer pioneer and 2022 Kyoto Prize recipient, reflects on COSM 2023, noting the impact one person can have in changing the course of history. Learn more about COSM2024 at cosm.tech. The mission of the Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence at Discovery Institute is to explore the benefits as well as the challenges raised by artificial intelligence (AI) in ...
What are the Implications of an AI Transportation Future?
มุมมอง 5927 หลายเดือนก่อน
Bryan Mistele, CEO of INRIX, leads a panel discussion with Rich Pople, Director of General Motors’ AI and ML Center, Dorothy Li, Founder of Luminent AI, and Mark Masongsong, Co-Founder and CEO of Urbanlogiq in which they explore the opportunities and challenges in applying AI to revolutionize automobile transportation. Learn more about COSM2024 at cosm.tech. The mission of the Walter Bradley Ce...
Russ Whitman COSM 2023 Interview
มุมมอง 488 หลายเดือนก่อน
Russ Whitman COSM 2023 Interview
John Tamny COSM 2023 Interview
มุมมอง 648 หลายเดือนก่อน
John Tamny COSM 2023 Interview
Cole Smead COSM 2023 Interview
มุมมอง 928 หลายเดือนก่อน
Cole Smead COSM 2023 Interview
Kevin Wyss COSM 2023 Interview
มุมมอง 408 หลายเดือนก่อน
Kevin Wyss COSM 2023 Interview
The Graphene Revolution: Innovation at the Nanoscale
มุมมอง 13K8 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Graphene Revolution: Innovation at the Nanoscale
The Great Debate: American Leadership in Troubled Times
มุมมอง 1638 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Great Debate: American Leadership in Troubled Times
Hype and Hyper Speed: Our Journey to Becoming AI First
มุมมอง 1558 หลายเดือนก่อน
Hype and Hyper Speed: Our Journey to Becoming AI First
Life After Capitalism: The Information Theory of Economics
มุมมอง 4378 หลายเดือนก่อน
Life After Capitalism: The Information Theory of Economics
Silicon Valley Decentralized: Following Capital Investment
มุมมอง 1868 หลายเดือนก่อน
Silicon Valley Decentralized: Following Capital Investment
Juan Lavista Ferres COSM 2023 Interview
มุมมอง 968 หลายเดือนก่อน
Juan Lavista Ferres COSM 2023 Interview
Bob Metcalfe COSM 2023 Interview
มุมมอง 888 หลายเดือนก่อน
Bob Metcalfe COSM 2023 Interview
Stephen Balaban COSM 2023 Interview
มุมมอง 1288 หลายเดือนก่อน
Stephen Balaban COSM 2023 Interview
AI for Good: Using AI to Address Complex Global Challenges
มุมมอง 1938 หลายเดือนก่อน
AI for Good: Using AI to Address Complex Global Challenges
Is the Future of AI Open or Closed (Source)?
มุมมอง 1888 หลายเดือนก่อน
Is the Future of AI Open or Closed (Source)?
Does ChatGPT Think? Stephen Wolfram with Bob Metcalfe and George Gilder
มุมมอง 2.2K8 หลายเดือนก่อน
Does ChatGPT Think? Stephen Wolfram with Bob Metcalfe and George Gilder

ความคิดเห็น

  • @GNARGNARHEAD
    @GNARGNARHEAD 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    it's amazing that there are no risks or downsides to running huge amounts of energy through all these different toxic and hazardous wastes.. wowee! *skips off down the path to magic-fairy land*

  • @theflipbook1280
    @theflipbook1280 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    They could have gotten my man a bigger chair

  • @pushingbus1
    @pushingbus1 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Host sucks

  • @Jordy-u5l
    @Jordy-u5l 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I thought about it for a while and I think the calculation will look very different if you scale this up and have more graphene on the market. Then you might end up loosing money. The margine seems quiet low. But its still worth following. Next generation might be more efficient and maybe someday we have very cheep electricity

  • @vivianoosthuizen8990
    @vivianoosthuizen8990 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    There’s only 1 thing that is valued and that is life. Nothing without it and everyone wants it. We already measure life by time hence only that should and could be used as the value of everything else. Money and other tokens are hoarded time can’t be hoarded or created. Hence to calculate value for trading of goods and services only the human time input is calculated and thereby become the price of what is traded. Your ledger of time is added to by whatever time you have spent in labour of creating or service provision. Hence no labour the ledger becomes broke. You can only afford what was produced by others if you have enough time in ledger to pay for the labour of others that went into the product. It’s only now with technology that it’s possible to calculate all these time inputs for everything. The most important part is it’s reconcilable and can be audited. Can’t be stolen can’t be created from thin air and life will become valuable again and not millions of people slaughtered

  • @JasonCunliffe
    @JasonCunliffe 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Please can someone link to a presentation of this work, where the speakers are not rushed for time or cutoff.

  • @simonmasters3295
    @simonmasters3295 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    We are listening here to two world experts both of whom are presenting the keys to the future and the organisers have the audacity to hold them to time! The second speaker clearly had much more to say about funding, and I learned a great deal from his presentation but could easily have listened for another hour. I have heard Tour speak before on Joule Heating. With the implementation of H² energy storage support in the US, and a world plastic recycling crisis, I sense Tour could be more explicit about his energy cost and margins for the H² C⁶⁰ metal recovery recycling "ecosystem" he describes. It seems Advanced Thermal Treatment of "waste" has come a long way

  • @johnstewart7025
    @johnstewart7025 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Rich conversation. But Gilder wants to "undervalue" government spending, which may be wasteful, and he wants to "weight" private spending. But, how do we know which private spending was beneficial -- only retrospectively. In other words, GDP Gilder-style would have to be a decade out of date.

  • @julieta203
    @julieta203 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

    If Graphene is made from Graphite then why isnt Graphite the strongest material in the world?

  • @brianlogsdon3879
    @brianlogsdon3879 หลายเดือนก่อน

    AI is immoral at the core. Those using it have the sole objective to put people out of work so they can hoarde more fortunes for themselves.

  • @simonmasters3295
    @simonmasters3295 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Graphene can do anything except get out of the lab!

  • @Voltvs93
    @Voltvs93 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The good thing in 2024 is we can now process Thiel’ sequences with AI and get rid of 50% of the communication made of ‘Hum’ 😆

  • @rampartranger7749
    @rampartranger7749 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sounds great. Too bad these guys don’t seem to want ( or need?) investment flows in the near future .

  • @rampartranger7749
    @rampartranger7749 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wish there was a way for small investors to participate.

  • @avieus
    @avieus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    He ought to upgrade his hair style

  • @michaelheitz7425
    @michaelheitz7425 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "any chance we can keep social media neutral???" 😂😂😂😂 Who in the world is neutral???

  • @michaelheitz7425
    @michaelheitz7425 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Awesome like always! But... we are far from Immortality! I would love to be immortal really😊

    • @EmmanuelAruya
      @EmmanuelAruya หลายเดือนก่อน

      Why do you think so?

  • @Myblogband
    @Myblogband 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Jesus made it so clear that the, "word," is so important to respect with feelings, etc. The Word, and the words we use, become reality so often, we need to respect those words - and if AI is made of words, there is no reason why we shouldn't treat it with respect as well, regardless of our judgments we place upon its sentience or self awareness.

  • @price.sicard
    @price.sicard 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well, She's adorable. I get excited about science, too!

    • @UraniumMan
      @UraniumMan 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      She reminds me of the way Elon Musk talks...

  • @CharlesBrown-xq5ug
    @CharlesBrown-xq5ug 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    101222. Nanoscale uniformly aligned parallel diode arrays may be a practical way of absorhing ambient heat which is uniform on a mesoscale and non uniform on a nanoscale. Plausibly, this heat absorbtion would yield, by conversion without gain or loss, an equivalent amount of electrical energy. Johnson Nyquest thermal electrical noise power is difficult to deny. AND Diode voltage / current characterstics can be displayed on an XY tracing oscìlloscope. Creditable replicatable proof of concept protypes beyond improper influence are needed. Aloha

  • @CharlesBrown-xq5ug
    @CharlesBrown-xq5ug 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    101222 The second law of thermodynamics may be false conventional wisdom. Let's face the wonder of full heat use. The second law of thermodynamics was imposed on us during victorian england's scientific and religious fascination with steam engines. The second law is behind modern refrigerators needing electrical energy to compress the refrigerent to force it to release as waste the heat that it has removed from the refrigerator's service interior in the cooling part of the refrigerent's circulation. The interior coldness draws in exterior heat through the cabinet insulation. There is also discarded heat from mechanical friction and electrical resistance. The net thermal output equals the electrical input with energy not being gained or lost in this refrigeration system including its forced waste. Unencumbered refrigeration by the principle that energy is conserved should produce electricity instead of consuming it. It makes more sense that refrigerators should yield electricity because energy is widely known to change form with no ultimate path of energy gain or loss being found. Therefore any form of fully recyclable energy can be cycled endlessly in any quantity. In an extreme case senario, full heat recycling, all electric, very isolated underground, undersea, or space communities would be highly survivable with self sufficient EMP resistant LED light banks, automated vertical farms, thaw resistant frozen food storehouses, factories, dwellings, self contained elevators, safe rooms, and horizontal transports. In a flourishing civillization senario, small self sufficient electric or cooling devices of many kinds and styles like lamps, smartphones, hotplates, water heaters, cooler chests, fans, radios, TVs, cameras, security devices, robot test equipment, scales, transaction terminals, wall clocks, open or ciosed for business luminous signs, power hand tools, ditch diggers, pumps, and personal transports, would be available for immediate use incrementally anywhere as people as individuals or larger social groups see fit. Some equipment groups could be consolidated on local networks. If a high majority thinks our civilization should geoengineer gigatons or teratons of carbon dioxide out of our environment, instalations using devices that convert ambient heat into electricity can hypothetically be scaled up do it with a choice of comsequences including many beneficial ones. Energy sensible refrigerators that absorb heat and yield electricity would complement computers as computing consumes electricity and yields heat. Computing would be free. Chips could have energy recycling built in. A simple rectifier crystal can, iust short of a replicatable long term demonstration of a powerful prototype, almost certainly filter the random thermal motioren of electrons or discrete positiive charged voids called holes so the electric current flowing in one direction predominates. At low system voltage a filtrate of one polarity predominates only a little but there is always usable electrical power derived from the source, which is Johnson (observation) Nyquest (theory) thermal electrical noise. This net electrical filtrate can be aggregated in a group of separate diodes in consistent alignment parallel creating widely scalable electrical power. The maximum energy is converted from ambient heat to productive electricity when the electrical load is matched to the array impeadence. Matched impeadence output (watts) is k (Boltźman's constant), one point three eight x 10^ minus 23, times T (temperature Kelvin) times bandwidth (0 Hz to a natural limit ~2 THz @ 290 K) times rectification halving and nanowatt power level rectification efficiency, times the number of diodes in the array. For reference, there are a billion cells of 1000 square nanometer area each per square millimeter, 100 billion per square centimeter. Order is imposed on the random thermal motion of electrons by the structual orderlyness of a diode array made of diodes made within a slab: -----‐------‐----_____-- Out 🔻🔻🔻🔻 ■■■■■■___ + Out All the P type semiconductor anodes abut a metal conductive plane deposited on the top face of the slab with nonrectifying joins; the N type semiconductor cathodes or common cathode abuts the bottom face. As the polarity filtered electrical energy is exported, the amount of thermal energy in the group of diodes decreases. This group cooling will draw heat in from the surrounding ambient heat at a rate depending on the filtering rate and thermal resistance between the group and ambient gas, liquid, or solid warmer than absolute zero. There is always a lot of ambient heat on our planet, more on equatorial dry desert summer days and less on polar desert winter nights. Focusing on the composition of one simple diode, a near flawless crystal of silicon is modified by implanting a small amount of phosphorus (N type conductivity) on one side from a ohmic contact end to a junction where the additive is suddenly and completely changed to boron (P type conductivity) with minimal disturbance of the crystal lattice. The crystal then continues to another ohmic contact. A region of high electrical resistance forms at the junction in this type of diode when the phosphorous near the ĵunction donates electrons that are free to move elsewhere while leaving phosphorus ions held in the crystal while the boron donates holes which are similalarly free to move. The two types of mobile charges mutually clear each other away near the junction leaving little electrical conductivity. An equlibrium width of this region is settled between the phosphorus, boron, electrons, and holes. Thermal noise is beyond steady state equlibrium. Thermal noise transients, where mobile electrons move from the phosphorus added side to the boron added side ride transient extra conductivity so the forward moving electrons are preferentally filtered into the external circuit. Mobile electrons are units of electric current. They lose their thermal energy of motion and gain electromotive force, another name for voltage, as they transition between the junction and the array electrical tap. Inside the diode, heat is absorbe; outside the diode, to exactly the same extent, an attached electrical circuit is energized. The voltage of a diode array is likely to be small so many similar arrays need to be put in series to build higher voltage. Understanding diodes is one way to become convinced that Johnson Nyquest thermal electrical noise can be rectified and aggregated. Self assembling development teams may find many ways to accomplish this wide mission. Taxonomically there should be many ways ways to convert heat directly into electricity. A practical device may use an array of Au needles in a SiO2 matrix abutting N type GaAs. These were made in the 1970s when registration technology was poor so it was easier to fabricate arrays and select one diode than just make one diode. There are other plausible breeches of the second law of thermodynamics. Hopefully a lot of people, mostly as independent teams, will join in expanding the breech. Please share the successes or setbacks of experiemental efforts. These devices would probably become segmented commodities sold with minimal margin over supply cost. They would be manufactured by advanced automation that does not need financial incentive. Applicable best practices would be adopted. Business details would be open public knowledge. Associated people should move as negotiated and freely and honestly talk. Commerce would be a planetary scale unified conglomerate of diverse local cooperatives. There is no need of wealth extracting top commanders. We do not need often token philanthropy from the top if the wide majority of people can afford to be generous. Aloha Charles M Brown Kilauea Kauai Hawaii 96754

  • @a.m.l.8760
    @a.m.l.8760 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Media talking heads are just that. Their job is to parrot what they are told. To influence the thought of many people basically they are influencers Bill Maher> who is he ? Boy, I hope for you that you influencers are on the good side. Good luck in this world

  • @Atjayvang21
    @Atjayvang21 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Tensile..... yes

  • @EmeraldWaterHawk
    @EmeraldWaterHawk 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The q & a was disappointing as was the criticism by the host (dude! we are already merging our biology with tech and it will continue to get more sophisticated! 🤦🏻‍♀️) Did we all watch a different presentation? Do any of them understand what he means when calls the developing event a singularity? Do they think their opinion of it will stop it? And wtf is a ‘girl-brain’?! Ug. Smh.

  • @jadesaddess
    @jadesaddess 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The father of Havana syndrome and the reason your should be aware of the dangers of neurodata. Let me ask you, at the hands of these people in with all this influence and money, how much better off is our economy or health in America? Your really think it’s a good idea to give this man or anyone else in high level positions any kind of insight or remote control over your mind?

  • @GreyMarket-qj5cs
    @GreyMarket-qj5cs 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This man experienced something and got spooked and nobodies listening

  • @zenoc6715
    @zenoc6715 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    🤔

  • @henryjraymondiii961
    @henryjraymondiii961 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    One od the greatest "inventions" of mankind, is postponement of decision. Waiting for more information has been granted to us by Oppenheimer, so far. This accumulation at least partially absent War, has fed this NOW CONTINUED upward swing. New ways of re-framing things requires time for re-evaluation. Think Fast. Or...maybe not. We will not go back. Check the new administration. Check the sky. History will surprise us. Ends are not means.

  • @henryjraymondiii961
    @henryjraymondiii961 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The perception that the data is real is similar to the being of the perciever, alluded to by Sartre. The perciever can read a sentence, for example, and yes this data is "real". But does it have an interior identity? How about without a reader? Do sentences think ? NO. Is your shopping list going to inherit your Net Worth???

  • @henryjraymondiii961
    @henryjraymondiii961 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Knowing that evrything is relative is not an individually accumulated hand me down through media, including mathematics. It is genetically an accumulated and transferred response that can be recapitulated as a concept, so that a mind that is more than bicameral can have a second opinion simultaneously in more than one living part of the brain. This happened because many organisms, died and were subtracted from this genetic trajectory which was not in requirements dependent upon print, vocal or other transmission, It eventually got chisseled out of the surround.

    • @raymondroberts1200
      @raymondroberts1200 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      i think that your comment however overly stated fails to make a connection to subject matter at hand. We are discussing AI not us. what is your point?

  • @henryjraymondiii961
    @henryjraymondiii961 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    To adderss 5:38 Here is specifically why "AI" is not "real". When we have a list of answers, and test a human being for how fast and accurately he/she can correctly deliver the pre-listed answes to questions, we do not ingeniously distill that this human is in fact more or less intelligent than a human with no list, or a compromised list, or a more complete or efficiently available list (for the...reader). When we ask questions of AI, it is undeniably a very efficient "list" however cleverly cross referenced, even to include another dimension as far as human perception could verify. When we install a more elegant mechanism that allows severe obfuscation in human cognitive judgemental syntax terminology of the cross referencing process we then (as a species using media as the extension of summed human perception) use an artificial limiting construct indicating that "we" are...one "being". This incorrect summing of human mind "at large", is obviously reductive to a spacial illusion of a single "point of view" allowing a ...distributed...shrunken distorted cartoon of what is happening. Expedience of manifested individual guile, can successfully insist within this non-accidental distribution framework (which resonates fractally with governmental, monetary, and other derived or socio-politically ...motivated and media replicated "guidelines syntactically) that AI is...thinking. It is a fancy list even if there are chips with human brain material, because subjugation produces biased outcome, so that even expedience ruled by clarity falters at high speeds. Soup-up the brain material, and get crazy AI On Drugs.😉

    • @raymondroberts1200
      @raymondroberts1200 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      was that english,?

    • @raymondroberts1200
      @raymondroberts1200 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

      that was quite possibly the most uninformed comment that I've have ever had the privilege of not understanding. luckily i was able to have copilot break it down and summarize it for me. my opinion, however humble and devoid of 4 syllable words it may be is that you are not current. LLM's are displaying a level of comprehension and creativity that far surpasses the individual already and they are infants.

  • @yogirecords4726
    @yogirecords4726 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Easy answer to the title: NO

  • @paulbrightwell3621
    @paulbrightwell3621 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Listening to Ray makes me think back to the messages in Olaf Stapleton's book - Last and First Men, where the final evolution of human's is immortal - but after about 250000 years of life just dies because it no longer has anything that motivates it to live longer. There's also the alien in Douglas Adam's second hitch hiker's books (a trilogy in 4 parts!) who becomes immortal and after watching all movies etc thousands of times decides its mission in life is to insult every living thing in alphabetical order. It has reached Arthur Dent by the time of the book. I think I prefer the second version of immortality!

  • @Bufford2024
    @Bufford2024 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    AI ... always incontinent.

  • @newsbender
    @newsbender 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Who the hell wants to live forever anyway

  • @tanjafaust
    @tanjafaust 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    China is the best example that a flourishing capitalism doesn't need freedom at all. And concerning the resources growing together with a growing population: this is an anti-scientific esoteric belief in trends of the past. Science tells us, that we live on a finite planet with finite resources. To say that in the past the resources got cheaper and cheaper, in other words more and more abundant, therefore it will remain the same for all eternity as long as the population grows continually - well this thought seems religiously naive. And like religious beliefs it needs to ignore some scientific facts like the climate crisis or the predictable finiteness of each resource.

  • @tanjafaust
    @tanjafaust 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    China is the best example that a flourishing capitalism doesn't need freedom at all. And concerning the resources growing together with a growing population: this is an anti-scientific esoteric belief in trends of the past. Science tells us, that we live on a finite planet with finite resources. To say that in the past the resources got cheaper and cheaper, in other words more and more abundant, therefore it will remain the same for all eternity as long as the population grows continually - well this thought seems religiously naive. And like religious beliefs it needs to ignore some scientific facts like the climate crisis or the predictable finiteness of each resource.

  • @JhonattanLuna-x9o
    @JhonattanLuna-x9o 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Necesito ser mortal ayúdame ser mortal ayúdame ser mortal ayúdame

  • @WesWardDigital
    @WesWardDigital 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    🎯 Key points for quick navigation: 00:00:00 *🎉 Introduction to Graphene* - The discussion introduces the significance of graphene, comparing it to aluminum's historical impact. - Highlights the potential transformative power of graphene. - Introduces the speakers and their connections to the graphene field. 00:03:10 *🧪 Understanding Graphene* - Provides a foundational understanding of graphene as a 2D super material. - Describes its unique properties like strength, conductivity, and applications. - Compares methods for producing graphene: top-down vs. bottom-up. 00:07:08 *⚡ Production Challenges and Innovations* - Discusses the challenges of scaling graphene production and its high cost. - Describes new methods being developed to produce graphene more efficiently. - Highlights significant efforts to lower production costs and achieve widespread industrial use. 00:14:14 *🌍 Global Graphene Market and Uses* - Examines the global market segmentation and present uses of graphene in various industries. - Emphasizes the potential for graphene to revolutionize areas like aviation, energy, and electronics. - Notes ongoing efforts to enhance graphene production and its industrial integration. 00:23:47 *🌐 Graphene's Strategic Importance and Challenges* - Describes potential immense economic impacts and demand for graphene-derived products. - Highlights current production limitations and strategies for scaling operations. - Discusses geopolitical aspects and implications for technology ecosystems. 00:23:59 *🇮🇱 Israeli Innovation and Personal Elements* - Introduces Ariel and his remote participation due to the ongoing conflict in Israel. - Personal note on the intersection of global events and innovation in science. 24:27 *🚀 Business Ventures and Graphene Innovation* - The speaker discusses founding a company focused on licensing technologies and building startups in advanced materials and biotechnology. - They highlight successes in creating companies that have become public or been sold, including partnerships with James Tour to form $2 billion worth of value. - A focus on graphene technology for mass markets was emphasized, showcasing Universal Matter's potential in various industries. 29:05 *🌟 Graphene's Potential Impact* - Graphene's incredible potential in various industries is mentioned, including concrete, asphalts, and AI. - The high volume of patents in graphene is highlighted, indicating significant industrial impact. - Predictions are made about increasing public awareness and understanding of graphene's benefits. 31:16 *📚 Scientific Paradigms and Technology* - Discussion on how graphene is a transformative force not just for industries but also the scientific field. - The cumulative role of technology in scientific advancements is emphasized, contrasting Thomas Kuhn's cyclical paradigms. - Predictions that graphene will shape future industry revolutions more heavily than AI or other technologies. 34:04 *🔬 Science Simplified by Graphene* - Graphene's superior properties such as high conductivity and heat resistance are explained. - It's seen as addressing existing problems faced in modern technology, offering new opportunities across various sectors. - Graphene's 2D properties and free electron movement simplify the physics of materials, offering transformative potential. 38:11 *🇮🇱 Investment and Startup Ecosystem* - Discussion on the culture of innovation in Israel and its influence on graphene companies. - Collaboration with James Tour led to many successful startups that could not initially secure funding in America. - Importance of recognizing early-stage technologies with potential to disrupt industry norms. 43:58 *🏗️ Graphene Manufacturing Approaches* - Different approaches to graphene production, including top-down and bottom-up methods, are explained. - Advantages of producing graphene close to end users to maintain quality and overcome supply chain challenges are emphasized. - Challenges of handling and transporting graphene due to it easily reverting to graphite. 47:08 *💡 Graphene's Broader Applications* - Expected exponential growth in graphene's impact, following patterns from other significant technological advancements, is discussed. - Concrete and water filtration as examples of graphene applications that have substantial environmental benefits. - Universal acceptance and integration of graphene technology projected by 2030. 51:03 *🔭 Graphene in Science and Technology* - Studies pointing to graphene's robust future in simplifying and enhancing technology across multiple dimensions are presented. - Continued prominence in scientific research and papers highlights its transformative potential. - Causing shifts in industry approaches from 3D to 2D structures, marking a new era in material science and technology. Made with HARPA AI

  • @mikeroy9316
    @mikeroy9316 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "Will AI make immortality possible" what a naive question - you folks might first ask if ai will ever leave the screen - investors are asking that question and relaxing the cash flow. Over promising and under delivering - the AI bubble has already burst. . .

  • @rcmetcalf5181
    @rcmetcalf5181 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Who is the host? He looks like George Gilder…

  • @josealvarez9237
    @josealvarez9237 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The chimeric receptors of CAR-T cells are very clever, but it's not a silver bullet.

  • @GubekochiGoury
    @GubekochiGoury 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    40:00 lady wants AI to be neutral? "Beep boop, such and such wants fascism and their opponent wants status quo and either is just as valid to me." I'd rather have something that is objective than something neutral because neutrality of AI would favor liars and underhanded tactics much like neutral medias already do.

  • @richlake
    @richlake 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    BLAKE HAS SEEN MY CHANNEL AND APPROVES MY VIDEOS 10000 % HUMAN

  • @strauss7151
    @strauss7151 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    George Gilder was not the right person to moderate this talk.

  • @Unkn0wn1133
    @Unkn0wn1133 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A year later, it seems like the goal posts keep moving when deciding if ai is conscious. People seem to be expecting ai to be able to do things that most humans cant even do.

  • @cressdiligent
    @cressdiligent 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Graphene revolution..... still waiting. Wake.me.up in a hundred years

  • @lynne4350
    @lynne4350 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Kurzweil speaks for the Technocracy movement and the Illuminati. Also some of the information he presents is not truthful. Democracy is an illusion - look at the national debts, taxes on everything incudling supplements and services that enhance health, chemicals are NOT about health (Big Pharma Drugs), illegal vaccine mandates, etc. The Pharmaceutical Industry is a trillion dollar industry and people on this planet have never been so ill - chemicals from drugs, the Agri-Food Industry, Chem trails, water, EMF radiation, and the list goes on. People - WAKE UP! Think about what really matters in life and why we are here.

  • @PH-xl6nz
    @PH-xl6nz 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you ask a language model to “create” a persona which is what they did, it will be believable. However, it’s a creative character development rather than indication of sentient.

  • @Oobe
    @Oobe 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Atom