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Kathleen Weber's avatar

Certainly, AI may come up with novel ideas, but will AI be able to recognize them as novel or as worthwhile? Humans have accidentally stumbled on useful innovations, but they were smart enough to recognize that their oopsies were beneficial. Penicillin was discovered when an attempt to grow bacteria was disrupted the accidental introduction of a mold. Rubber became useful when Charles Goodyear dropped a rubber/sulfur mixture on a Hot stove and learned how to harden it.

earl king's avatar

In my memory, there's a group of people who tinkered in their garage. Inventors we not always PhDs in well equipped labs. I used to remember people's phone numbers, I can barely remember my wife's, and couldn't even begin to tell what my two daughters are.

I never used the slide rule, but I'll bet the people who did knew all the principles of how it worked and why it was useful. Do we mourn the death of the slide rule? I remember the controversy over the personal calculator and whether it could be used in class.

What I do know is that other than the uber curious, most Americans will be content to ask their personal agent. I wonder if engineering can be sustained? Would you trust a human or a computer to tell the stress load on a bridge? Humans often are fallible.

Do students today read Dante's Inferno and just read the Cliffs Notes

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