Genesis Audiobook By Henry A. Kissinger, Eric Schmidt, Craig Mundie cover art

Genesis

Artificial Intelligence, Hope, and the Human Spirit

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Genesis

By: Henry A. Kissinger, Eric Schmidt, Craig Mundie
Narrated by: Niall Ferguson, Byron Wagner
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About this listen

As Artificial Intelligence (AI) becomes more dynamic and ubiquitous, it is dramatically empowering people in all walks of life while also giving rise to urgent questions about the future of humanity—a historic challenge whose contours and consequences are revealed by three eminent thinkers in Genesis.

As it absorbs data, gains agency, and intermediates between humans and reality, AI will help us to address enormous crises, from climate change to geopolitical conflicts to income inequality. It might well solve some of the greatest mysteries of our universe, revolutionize fields as diverse as medicine and architecture, and elevate the human spirit to unimaginable heights. But it will also pose challenges on a scale and of an intensity that we have never seen—usurping our power of independent judgment and action, testing our relationship with the divine, and perhaps even spurring a new phase in human evolution. Whom will we choose to lead our species through this wilderness? Or have we, passively and unwittingly, already chosen?

Charting a course between blind faith and unjustified fear, Genesis outlines an effective strategy for navigating the age of AI. The last book of elder statesman Henry Kissinger, written with technologists Eric Schmidt and Craig Mundie, it prepares the decisionmakers of today—that is, all of us—for the choices of tomorrow, and equips us to seize the opportunities presented by AI without falling prey to the darker forces that this revolution has unleashed.

©2024 Henry A. Kissinger, Eric Schmidt, Craig Mundie (P)2024 Little, Brown & Company
Computer Science Science & Technology Technology & Society
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Important Must

Everyone needs to take a 30 day break and get to know about general AI

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clearly a Kissinger book

opinions from a high altitude. heavily moral and ethical. little depth on any specific subject

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2 people found this helpful

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Unexplained Authority

An excellent discussion of the pros and cons of AI. We humans have evolved a biological system designed for our biological survival. It is implemented by positive and negative conscious feelings. Rule based AI or feedback learning mechanisms can certainly generate creative solutions to complex problems but they can’t replicate the illogical emotional decisions of feeling organisms. That conflict will be difficult to resolve one way or the other.

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Machiavellian of the Yom Kippur War is now a humanitarian

It was interesting that AI could reach a state of consciousness. Maybe AI would realize that it needs a steady flow of electrons from the energy grid. it would need an alliance with humans to keep the electrons flowing. If there is a power interruption, would this be like a mini stroke for the computer when the power is turned back on? AI developers have said that they are not quite sure of how the electrons flow in the AI and the exact theory behind how it functions.
Dr. Kissinger is painted as a great humanitarian at the end of his life. During the Israeli war in 1973, Dr. Kissinger felt that this war was necessary for Egypt and Israel to conclude some type of peace. Egypt needed to achieve some degree of gravitas after the loss of the last war with Israel. Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir was told long before this war started that any type of preemptive strike would not be tolerated by Dr. Kissinger. After the war started, Israel was saved by President Nixon when he expedited the black boxes for the Israeli jets that could block the new Russian Sam missiles. To this day, President Nixon has a hero status in the state of Israel.

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Almost every word

Everyone in this world today must know what is in the book, even those at age 100 or older.

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Not as good as I expected

I purchased this after listening to Eric Schmidt on the podcast "Diary of a CEO". The podcast was great, but the book was not. I am very interested in AI. The first part of the book goes over the progress of humanity and how we got to the point we are with technology today. The second portion was forward looking. I appreciate that, but I didn't hear anything profound. I may have set my expectations too high. I know this was important project to Henry Kissinger and the other authors. Unfortunately, I just never really got into it. I tried and I did listen until the end. You might want to save the money and check this one out through your library.

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Provocative

Should be required reading for all AI Enthusiasts. The philosophical questions to be debated are profound.

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mid at best.

I was really hopeful that this book would be insightful but it's genuinely just the same shit people who read and write science fiction, and those of us who have been aware of a.i. development for thr past 10 years, if not longer, have been discussing for ages at this point. I don't know maybe I'm not the target demographic, but this felt like a brainless regurgitation of better, older conversations, as a shameless cash grab. mid. mid at best.

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