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How to Outsmart the Machines

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How to Outsmart the Machines

Machines Are Taking Over. So How Smart Do You Have to Be to Outsmart Them?

Umair Haque,

5 min read
5 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

Humans and machines are intelligent in different ways, but technology may cause people to neglect what makes them human.

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Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Eye Opening
  • Background

Recommendation

Umair Haque, author of an esteemed blog on trends in the business world, describes qualitative differences between machine intelligence and human intelligence. One excels in processing speed and the other in synthesizing meaning and purpose from information. He makes the case that machines today have a negative impact on the human capacity for drawing meaning and purpose from data. While Haque doesn’t offer solutions for the apparently worsening problem of machines undermining meaningful human intelligence, he does demonstrate how to have a healthier attitude toward human cognition. getAbstract recommends his analysis to everyone concerned about the effect of advancing computer intelligence on humans.

Summary

Intelligence falls into four categories: “smart smart, smart stupid, stupid smart, and stupid stupid.” How you think about intelligence determines your category, and that category may ascertain humanity’s collective fate. The qualitative way in which you view intelligence can determine how you compare the relative smartness or stupidity of human versus machine. If you measure intelligence by sheer computing speed and logical productivity, then computers are smart and humans are stupid. But if you measure intelligence by the ability to synthesize information into “meaning...

About the Author

Umair Haque is a member of Thinkers50 and wrote Betterness and The New Capitalist Manifesto.


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