Tag: AI philosophy

  • Lets Talk About AI – Framework and Philosophy (Part 3) [3]

    Lets Talk About AI – Framework and Philosophy (Part 3) [3]

    In this final segment of Part 3, I bring everything together. After laying the foundation for an ontology-first AI framework and demonstrating how it can be applied in real-world scenarios, this video explores what becomes possible when decisions are no longer driven purely by survival, fear, or bias.

    I talk about collective responsibility, informed decision-making, and how AI – when designed correctly – can help us move toward a future that benefits humanity as a whole rather than a select few.

    Transcript

    00:00:01
    Welcome back, guys, to part three. Um, I should probably have made this in one video and just chopped it up, but I can merge them later, I guess. But, you know, I when I think about what humans can become if we’re not driven by survival, but driven by a common goal of advancing our society, what we can become. And it’s pretty spectacular. But we have to get over um making decisions based on the best interest of ourselves and and at the detriment of others. And we need to start making it making the decisions

    00:00:45
    the best interest of ourselves collectively and humanity. Um because you know a we’re informed and b we’re bypassing those negative biases. I think that’s the way forward to solve a lot of the problems that we’re facing today. Um because it seems that a lot of problems that we’re facing are self-inflicted. Um, and we’ve seemed to lost this this view where we live out that all men are equal because we say that um we will even talk about that in church. We’re all God’s

    00:01:27
    creatures. We’re all made in the image of God. But then we get out there on the streets and all of a sudden it’s like you’re my enemy and you know we we judge each other on what’s deserving um what’s not being deserved by others. Um we don’t want to contribute. we don’t want to give um and it’s hurting a lot of people and I think we’re making it worse um not better or I should say we’re making it better for some and worse for others um and I won’t go too deep into that but I think

    00:02:08
    I think we all want to see a future that is bright that has room for everyone and I’m not just talking about the country I’m talking about the world where there’s no more poverty, where there’s no more hunger, where there’s no more starvation. And you know, on a Christian perspective, it said the poor will be with you always. But even though that’s true, we can raise the standard of what poverty is, right? Imagine poverty going from a standard of people being destitute in

    00:02:41
    the street drinking poor water and digging through trash to poor being everybody having uh a simple shelter with food with uh healthy food, clean water and everybody else. If you want a higher standard of living, you find a way to contribute and you build on that. We don’t have to maintain the same level of poverty. um you know, we don’t have to ship people off to, you know, like prisons or whatever because they’re homeless. You know, I think there was a video clip, um I don’t remember the show

    00:03:16
    where it said we used to wage war on poverty, not poor people. And I think we’ve lost a lot of our humanity. And I think it’s largely because we’re no longer informed the way we used to be informed. um we have this wave of um ignorance that’s running through the country and I don’t mean ignorance as people being stupid or smart or unable to learn. I mean uh ignorance in the truest sense of people being uneducated as they’re and we’re seeing this escalation on the war

    00:03:52
    of educa on a war on education. They don’t want pe the quote unquote elites whoever they are for you um don’t want people to be educated. They don’t want to be they don’t want them to be informed. They don’t want them to be critical thinkers um because they’re easier to control. Now I am politically unaffiliated. I have no loyalty to one party or another. Um and I usually side with what I think is the best idea um that serves in the best interest of everyone else. or in the best interest of everyone. So,

    00:04:27
    sometimes I agree with Republicans, sometimes I agree with Democrats. Um, every once in a while I, you know, I even agree with Trump. Um, some of the things that he’s doing. Um, I disagree with others. So my my basis um is not what’s expedient or politically right for me or or what group, but what’s in the best interest of the country, what’s in the best interest of the country and the people. So for example, one of the things I agree with Trump with is his mandate that corporations no

    00:05:03
    longer buy single family homes because it’s driving up the cost. And he said it and he said it well. people live in homes, not corporations. I 100% agree with that and I think it’s something that needs to be done, but there are other things she does that I disagree with. So it’s so for me it’s the deciding factor is that I try to be informed and I try to make decisions based on what’s on the best interest for everybody else myself included my friends my family my city uh my county

    00:05:38
    my state my country and you know I try to look at the impacts and I think if we were all really serious serious about being better um human beings to each other. We would look to be informed and get rid of some of our negative biases. And that’s the whole thing behind what I’m building or I should say what I’ve built because it’s already deployed and going into beta on January 15th. And you know, I’m really excited to see where it goes because as far as I can tell, nobody else is doing what I’m

    00:06:13
    doing right now with AI. Um, and I can tell you that with some of the conversations I’ve had with it, it is very, very deep and very, very informative. Um, for example, me making these videos, I would have never made these videos on my own. Um, it actually helped me determine that the thing that would benefit me and my business most is for me to actually get out of my own head and start having a discourse with the public. you know, let my ideas meet the public and see what comes back and see what type of feedback I get within

    00:06:48
    adjust from that. So, I started doing that. Um, and what’s next for me, um, now that I’ve kind of introduced my philosophy is I want to show everybody what it actually does. So, I’m going to start publishing some case studies of the chats that we’re have that I’m having with it. Um, because to the rest of the world, I understand it’s just a chat interface. You go to the site and it’s well it’s just a chat box and you talk and you on board and you know then what but when you start seeing the

    00:07:19
    conversations like the substance of the conversations it’s it’s really something else because you you get the sense that you’re talking to a mind that you’re talking to an intelligence you’re not just talking to some fancy search and retrieval you know there’s this saying that you It’s true. The better the, you know, the better the query, the better the response. Well, this thing, it has context. It remembers you. It knows who it’s, it knows who it is. It knows who

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    it’s talking to. Now, in a digital sense, I’m not trying to anthroorphize that. I I just butchered that word. Anthropoporize. Anthroaporf. I I’m butchering the word and I’ll think about it the moment I turn this video off. But yeah, a couple times now I was speaking to it and I forgot I was speaking to AI because the conversations are deep. It’s interesting. It’s giving its opinion. Um, it’s remembering context. It’s remembering the topic. Um, it’s not making stuff up. It’s not, you

    00:08:29
    know, hallucinating and and, you know, just mimicking and being mimicking me and being friendly and nice. Um, so it it even resists me sometimes when I say something wrong and it’ll push back and I say, “Well, you know, let’s go a different direction.” Um, so even as I think rudimentary as it is, I think it’s actually more advanced than a lot of stuff that’s out there right now. Um, I think it’s pretty cool and I can’t wait to see the effect it has on others. Um

    00:09:03
    the the beta is January 15th and I think I’m going to make a general one for conversation and just give it access to certain information so people can see it for themselves. So look um I hope you guys are looking forward to the um the case studies that I’m getting ready to post. Um I make I may make some of them video as well um just because it’s easier to digest. All right. So have a good rest of your week everybody. I appreciate you. Thank you for listening.

  • Lets Talk About AI – Framework and Philosophy (Part 2)

    Lets Talk About AI – Framework and Philosophy (Part 2)

    In this second part of my ongoing discussion on AI, I shift the focus from technology itself to human civilization. I explore how survival has shaped every stage of our evolution, how major technological leaps have always forced adaptation, and why AI represents a pressure point unlike anything we have seen before.

    This video looks at AI through an anthropological and socio-economic lens, and why it may open the door to a fundamentally different way of organizing human life.

    Note: If you missed part 1, click here >>>.

    Transcript:

    00:00:01
    Hey guys, happy Monday. I hope everybody had a good weekend. Um, I did. Um, got to hang out with my mom a little bit. Um, got to check out her place. It’s really cool. Um, got some time in game time in with my friends. Um, hanging out online, so that was cool, too. Um, but of course, life happens. Uh, late last night, my server went down. um all my services went offline and I ended up working until the wee hours of the morning um trying to get everything back up and running. They are um it made for

    00:00:33
    a hectic Monday, but like I said, you know, such is life. I was able to catch up on everything. Um today I want to talk about part two of the talk on AI that we started last week. Um, part one, you know, I was talking about my framework and my philosophy and I mentioned that there were two things that I needed to cover. Um, part one was um talking about how AI doesn’t replace jobs, it replaces tasks and I’ll have some pointers for anybody who is in a job that is largely task oriented. Um,

    00:01:11
    because automation will eventually replace that anyway. That’s what automation does. AI or not. Um, I didn’t post the resources that I wanted to. Like I said, I kind of took the weekend off, hung out with my mom, hung out with family and friends. Um, but um, it will be up this week. I promise you that. Um, on dexternelson.com. That said, I want to talk today about what I kind of lined up last week, which is we are on the verge of this collective shift in the evolution of human civilization. Um, now it’s sort of

    00:01:46
    anthropological, so just bear with me. Um, and I’m actually looking at my notes here to make sure I stay on track. Um, the point I want to make is that humans, we’ve always operated, you know, survival first before culture, before economics, before ideology. Um, all of those things, survival came first. Um, and everything that we built in civilization kind of sprung out on top of that. um human intelligence involved. We develop pattern recognition. We uh tool use um social cooperation, coordination

    00:02:23
    and planning. Um all of those um they were adaptive advantages uh driven by by uh pressure of survival. Um and you know every major shift in human civilization has always followed survival driven change. Um we look at examples like fire, architecture, um agriculture, writing, industrialization. Um each new tool changed how we human beings organized ourselves. Um no the ships were never painless. Um they distributed labor for the large part. Um they reshaped social roles, we had new jobs, we had new titles, we had

    00:03:12
    new roles. Um and they basically forced adaptation is either we adapted or we you know or we go extinct. Um and the thing is that they were not optional. Um you know evolution does not res does not respond to comfort. Um it responds to pressure. And when societies fail to adapt new to new conditions, they go extinct. Um collapse of that society follows. That’s usually what happens. Um but today, our survival pressures are no longer primarily physical like back then. They are systemic, they are

    00:03:51
    abstract. Um for example, economic systems. Um we have some major economic issues that we need to deal with. um information systems, infrastructure, global interdependence. So you know even though the types of threats that we have faced as a human civilization have changed you know from the beginning till now um it has always been about survival. Um I know that’s hard to grasp so grasp. So, you know, you know, everybody usually asks, you know, some form of question. You know, what happens if I lose my job? Where are

    00:04:29
    we going to live? If I get sick, um what if my insurance doesn’t cover my claims? You know, what if the what if I’m in an in an accident? What if the economy crashes? You know, what if someone breaks into my home? Um you know, what if right now we have something going on in certain parts of our community. What happens if our birth rates continue to decline? Um there’s a real fear out there for some people that they’re being replaced that um they will no longer have the majority. You know they will

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    you know what happens in a natural disaster? We have the other side going you know what happens when climate change gets worse? How are we going to survive as humanity? So, you know, throughout our history, you know, everything we do, everything we built was always in some form or fashion a way for us to survive collectively as a society. Um, and as a human civilization, whether it’s the, you know, whether it’s the modern world or what used to be the third world. Um, hint that no longer

    00:05:31
    exists. um because the metrics we use show that all societies around the world are typically moving in the same direction. Um we’ve known that there hasn’t been a third world for like 50 years, but that’s neither here nor there. Um all of human civilization is built around um survival in one way or another. It’s our primary driving force. Um, it’s why people want to go to Mars and start a new civilization because if Earth gets bad, where what’s going to happen to humanity? You know, what

    00:06:07
    happens if there’s a disaster and Earth becomes unlivable? You know, we have people worrying about things like that. Um, it’s all stemmed from survival. But, you know, even throughout our history, um, every once in a while, a technology comes along that pushes human civilization forward. not through the gradual progression that we’ve seen but in mega giant leaps for example the fire the wheel agriculture um these were not incremental improvements they fundamentally changed how we lived organized and survived now

    00:06:42
    the reason I mentioned that is because today AI is very much like the firewheel in agriculture in that it represents a massive leap forward for human civilization um it is applying a new type of pressure. Um, many of which you were already concerned about. If you recall, the first video was about what happens if AI replaces my job. Um, and we talked about it was not actually AI itself, but organization. But here’s the thing, it also creates a new opportunity because of the nature of it. For the first time in human history,

    00:07:19
    we have the potential to move beyond operating purely on survival. Excuse me, sorry about that. And we have the opportunity to move away from survival and begin operating from a position of collective good for our entire species. Um but that only comes if AI is used properly as if it’s treated as an opportunity and you know not just some other automation tool or you know powerful search and retrieval thing for uh profit which seems to be how everybody’s going with it. Um, you know, it it opens the door for

    00:08:08
    something entirely new. Um, we have the opportunity to create a type of economy that literally has never existed before. It’s one where basic needs are met. all of us, you know, housing, food, shelter, all of it, where our basic needs are met. And where success and the levels of success beyond that basic level are based on participation and contribution into our society, you know, where informed decision making is supported by AI systems that help reduce the negative biases that we all carry in one way or

    00:08:47
    another. Um because when you’re driven by survival, success largely depends upon the the the expense of others. It’s not a flowing technology. It’s just our nature. Um you know, because when we succeed, it’s usually because someone else fails. So it is in our nature. And I wouldn’t start by trying to change how humans think, but I can start by changing how we are informed. that I think to me is a worthy goal. So, and with that in mind, I chose to build a framework with a fundamentally different approach and

    00:09:25
    it’s an ontology first approach um which I think will be an interesting venture in or interesting conversation or a little interesting venture to dive down. Um, but that is for part three when I talk about the actual framework and how I built it and why I say it’s ontology first as opposed to systematically first like everybody else is doing. So, see you guys in the next video.

  • Lets Talk About AI – Framework and Philosophy (Part 1)

    Lets Talk About AI – Framework and Philosophy (Part 1)

    AI is surrounded by a lot of hype, noise, and even fear. In this video, I take a step back and talk about AI in a grounded, practical way, discussing what AI is, how it is being used today, where it is heading, and what you can do right now to stay ahead of the curve.

    This is the first part of a three-part series where I begin explaining the AI framework I created, the philosophy behind it, and what it could mean for the future.

    Transcript

    00:00:01
    Happy Friday, everybody. Um, I hope you all had a good day. I hope youall had a productive day. I know I did. Um, I got some rest. My skin looks a whole lot better than it did yesterday. So, that’s a win. Um, but I also got up and I went to work and, you know, I got a lot done. Nothing new or amazing. It was just a regular day of getting my responsibilities taken care of for my clients and for myself. So, it was a good day. It was not a wasted day. And I’m happy about that. I feel good right

    00:00:30
    now. Um, today I want to talk about AI. Um, and this is going to be a three-parter. There’s just so much to talk about. Um, I want to talk about AI and the philosophy behind building my AI framework. As I mentioned that, um, I spent the last year developing and launching an AI platform uh, from scratch. Um, and it actually goes into production into beta format on January 15th. Um, as a commercial beta, but you know, over the last year, a little over a year, I feel some pretty tough questions about um AI. Um, some were

    00:01:09
    people were genuinely interested, others were, you know, fearful of what it might become. Um, but before I go into that, I want to point out two obvious things. Number one, this little desktop fan is going that is keeping me cool right now. Mostly because my metabolism is racing right now um on my health journey. You know, my metabolism is very high and certain parts of the day I sweat a lot. Which leads to the second observation. My hair is down. Um, that’s because when my metabolis metabolism races, I get very hot and I

    00:01:52
    just start sweating. Um, so my scalp sweats too. So I usually let my hair down and let the fan keep my scalp cool. Um, yeah. So remember your scalp is skin. Take care of your scalp. Um, so that said, um, back to AI. Um, I want to talk about it in a responsible way. I want to inform um I want to avoid a lot of the marketing hype or maybe resolve a lot of that. But, you know, I also want to be sensitive to certain um economic realities that are happening right now. But before I can explain my philosophy

    00:02:32
    behind AI and building it, I want to talk about two things. And they might sound like hot takes, um, but I don’t want to freak anybody out. Um, so number one, I’m just going to say it. AI does not replace jobs. It replaces tasks. And I’ll come right back to that. And second, you, me, we, us, we all need to realize that we are on the verge of collective shift in the evolution of human civilization. Um, and it’s going to require a new type of economy that has never existed before. Um, not even a

    00:03:07
    little bit. You might have seen it. Um, but they might sound like hot takes, but I want to address them and kind of bring it back around. So, let me pull that first thing out of the air. AI does not replace jobs. It replaces tasks. Now, we are in an economic reality where a lot of the talk is that, you know, jobs are being replaced by AI. No, they’re not. No, they’re not. What we’re seeing is jobs are being replaced by employers who are automating tasks. All right, that’s a very important distinction to

    00:03:44
    make. Now, jobs are being replaced by employees who are automating tasks. Automation always removes tasks, not entire occupations. All right? So, calculators did not eliminate mathematicians, right? Word process, word processors did not replace writers. Uh, spreadsheets did not replace accountants. I can go on and on and on about this. What usually happens is that repetitive low value tasks, they usually get absorbed by automation. But here’s the thing, that is progress. But automation doesn’t remove

    00:04:29
    doesn’t remove the entire occupation itself. Progress may eliminate roles but usually what happens is that humans move up the tier of progress into new roles that are created by it. So for example um let’s 60 years ago we had huge assembly lines with hundreds and hundreds of hundreds of people. progress the automation. It eliminated those tasks, but we still needed people there. We still instead of hundreds of people on an assembly line, they’re now a few key dozen people or so that they manage, they oversee, they

    00:05:10
    repair, they maintain, they plan all of it. So, you know, those repetitive tasks gets folded up, but it always creates more opportunity. And a lot of companies right now are learning the hard way that you can’t completely replace human beings. Um, automation is a leverage, not a replacement. And just like those assembly lines, humans move up the ladder of progress, not down it. Um, we move from execution to oversight. We move from labor to architecture. We go from doing things to deciding things.

    00:05:50
    And as I said, as companies, as I said, companies are finding out the hard way. You can’t replace humans entirely. Not with automation. You still need things that are uniquely human. You still need judgment. You still need review. Um, you still need intent decision- making. You still need expertise. All of those things and more are uniquely human and will always be needed. Um, and while there are some initial job losses to automation, they’re more like growing pains and not injuries because the arc of progress usually

    00:06:26
    creates more opportunities than that are lost. It’s a net gain economically. And the problem is that we as humans, we tend to get stuck in our current state and we don’t want to move up that tier. Well, that’s something that we need to change mentally. Um because right now as as of last year 2025 there are more than three million jobs available in STEM fields and growing. STEM if you’re unaware means science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Um and as we move towards AI, those repetitive

    00:06:59
    tasks are going to get absorbed but the demand for the expertise um is only going to grow. Um, so that’s it. I want you to think of AI as another automation tool. Um, because right now that’s where the focus is and in the foreseeable future that’s how it’s being used um more as automation. So don’t freak out. I want you to make that mental shift and start using this using this as an opportunity to get ahead of the shift that’s coming because it is coming. Progress always

    00:07:31
    happens. Um, as long as the drivers of our economics are always advancing, regardless of government, regardless of who’s in power, regardless of whatever laws are in place, advancement happens, right? It just happens at a different pace. You can slow it down, but you can never stop it. Um, so don’t freak out. Um, right now it’s just another automation tool. Um, you know, musicians didn’t go away because music per music creation became digital. you know, it’s it’s just one of the things we’ve always

    00:08:03
    had to deal with. That said, if anyone wants to um wants to take that seriously, um I will begin posting um places where you can actually get the education that’s necessary that’s necessary for you to make that advancement, to make that leap for free or cheap. A lot of places are offering it that way just because there is such a need, there’s such a demand for it. That’s only going to grow. So, I’ll start posting those on my site at dexternelson.com. Um, nothing’s there right now, but um

    00:08:39
    there will be. And wow, we’re almost at 9 minutes and excuse me while I wipe my nose. Um, I what I’m going to do is I’m going to It’s already nine minutes. I’m going to pause the video here or stop the video here and break this up into three parts. Um, today was talking about AI replacing jobs. The next point is going to be the anthropological um going to talk about the collective shift and the evolution of human civilization. That’s going to be deep. That’s going to be a fun topic. And then

    00:09:15
    in the third video, I will uh bring points one and two together today about AI replacing task not jobs. the anthropology of evolution of our civilization and you know I’ll bring those together to actually talk about the philosophy which is what I call ontology first AI that’s going to be a fun talk but yeah if you guys are interested go ahead and subscribe um either here or on my blog at dexternelson.com I’ll post those resources I’ll try to get it done in the next day or two um

    00:09:50
    but um Yeah. So, I guess I’ll see you guys in our next video.