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Steve McCarthy's avatar

Another enjoyable-to-read and provocative offering from you, Chuck. Thank you for putting intellectually stimulating and well articulated ideas into the world. We all keep hearing that the pace of change--already the fastest In our species’ short history--is accelerating and doing so at an increasing rate, like the universe. I do not care for social media but feel like I must engage with it for work purposes; I am skeptical of its actual value in relation to the time commitment and others’ ascribed importance to posts. For fun I listen to a handful of podcasts and have a long list of books patiently waiting their turn for my attention. The future: I am excited about the potential for an AI-enabled assistant to help me navigate the world on my terms. Of course there will other more positive impacts in medicine, robotics, manufacturing, transportation, the environment, communications, space, and on and on. And of course there will be downsides and reasons to worry about those downsides that are more probable than others. But in the meantime I will stick to what I enjoy now and remain open-minded for new possibilities.

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David Bates's avatar

This is really a remarkable piece that I'm just now getting to, grazing through your archive here. I read it with the uncanny feeling that large swaths of it could have written about myself, including a strong preference for getting my news from newspapers. I read this a couple times, and found myself sort of reassembling words and phrases and applying them into my situation, which also feels rather like hanging from a ledge. One difference: Rather than having spent my working life innovating, I find that the middle-age segment of my writing life now, unfortunately, demands it. By virtue of shifting my journalism work to exclusively arts and culture coverage, I have basically shouted "leave me behind" even as I come to grips with the fact that, given the state of things, I've *already* been left behind. Since I get to focus doing on what I love (reading and writing, along with seeing films and plays, etc.) it makes me wonder what purpose the work serves *as* "work," if that makes any sense. Last night I found myself asking, "Is it okay to spend the evening reading about Lord Byron and wondering if some connection might be made with David Bowie with regard to how artists create a persona of themselves?" And: "Would that be of use to anyone, or have I reached a point in my life where it's enough to just figure it out for myself?" and to not worry about how to crowbar it into "work." Anyway, probably starting to ramble here. Great article, I'm really enjoying your perspective. We are definitely on the same page on a lot of stuff.

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