[Ailist] Re: Steve jobs and AI? Another perspective
Mike Sands
msands at dccnet.com
Sat Mar 8 09:29:23 MST 2008
To what extent will leaders and people in the future osmose towards more inclusive processes because they have been in those new inclusive envirnoments.
I actually don't think it matters one bit which computer is better - although both are better than they would be had they been the only one (oops the unavoidable realities of paradox and contradiction are raising their heads here).
Computers,sports, movies, are to a pretty large extent aimed at helping people's minds be engaged - the more inclusive the social processes are the more the social processes can provide loser- free engagement.
It will be neat in the next 500 years when we stop seeking the iconic leader - even today the more inclusive the leader is the less she is likely to be noticed by world.
AI is a vehicle, a medium of inclusion - teaching a program of Appreciative Conversation is highly rewarding and actually provides the participants with new - (to them) ways to find things to appreciate in each other and finding they have these skills gives them new ways to appreciate themsleves - sort of like calories for the emotions.
In a recent class one person said he found he was becoming interested in the process of becoming interested - I liked that.
Mike
Who are the iconic leaders of inclusion? I'm reading John Steinbeck's Cannery Row - it values valuing. I don't think that any of the major religions promote selves (that's selves) help through Appreciatvie Conversation.
What do we need computers for anyway? - and I would never have learned about AI without them. - (I WOULD regret that)
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