4.8 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 3 August 2023
⏱️ 54 minutes
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The uses and abuses of ChatGPT artificial intelligence language model have taken the collective imagination by storm. Apocalyptic predictions of the singularity, when technology becomes uncontrollable and irreversible, frighten us as we imagine a future where human intelligence is irrelevant. Prof. Michael Littman joins us to contextualize the advancement of artificial intelligence and debunk the paranoid rhetoric littering the public discourse.
Michael has made groundbreaking research contributions enabling machines to learn from their experiences, assess the environment, make decisions, and improve their actions over time in real-world applications. His later work expanded into multi-agent systems, investigating how several AI entities can learn to cooperate, compete, or coexist in shared environments. Picture a team of robots in a factory, each with different tasks. The challenge here isn't just for each robot to do its job effectively but also to collaborate with the others, avoid collisions, and adapt to changes in real time.
Emerging concepts of 'intelligence' in artificial intelligence aren't about building machines that can perform tasks faster and more accurately than humans; it is about building machines that can think, learn, and adapt - machines that aren't just tools but collaborative partners.
If we examine our resistance to this emerging technology, we might catch glimpses of our unconscious fear of regression and dependency. Observation suggests most people fall into one of two groups, those who idealize a world where they are free of demands and another where they are enslaved by superiors. When we realize the fear or fantasy of regression is not the likely outcome of artificial intelligence, we are free to imagine the innumerable creative applications of the new technology and the machines that use it.
MICHAEL L. LITTMAN, PhD
Michael L. Littman is University Professor of Computer Science at Brown University, where he studies machine learning and decision-making under uncertainty. He has earned multiple university-level awards for teaching and his research has been recognized with three best-paper awards and three influential paper awards. Littman is a Fellow of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence and the Association for Computing Machinery. He is currently serving as Division Director for Information and Intelligent Systems at the National Science Foundation. His book "Code to Joy: Why Everyone Should Learn a Little Programming" (MIT Press) will be released October 3rd 2023.
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0:00.0 | Well, before we get started with today's podcast, we just want to quickly let any clinicians |
0:06.0 | out there know that the Philadelphia Association of Union Analysts, from which we all graduated, |
0:12.2 | is offering an advanced clinical practice program. So it's a case seminar for experienced |
0:17.8 | clinicians to read and explore and apply Jung's concept to clinical practice. It meets once a month |
0:24.8 | in the fall and once a month in the spring, four times in the fall, four times in the spring. |
0:30.0 | I believe it's going to be on Saturday in the fall and on Sunday in the spring. And there are |
0:37.6 | just a few spots left. The seminar will be led by a senior analyst. We know and love both of the |
0:46.2 | people who are going to be leading. So it's our esteemed colleagues, Mark Dean and John White, |
0:53.2 | who are both really brilliant. So if you are a senior clinician and you're interested in delving |
0:59.6 | into young a little bit more, we encourage you to take a look. And we will put a link in the show |
1:07.4 | notes to that material. So thank you. Welcome to this Jungian life. Three good friends and Jungian |
1:16.6 | analysts, Lisa Martiano, Deborah Stewart and Joseph Lee invite you to join them for an intimate |
1:22.4 | and honest conversation that brings a psychological perspective to important issues of the day. |
1:30.3 | I'm Lisa Martiano and I'm a Jungian analyst in Philadelphia. |
1:34.0 | I'm Joseph Lee and I'm a Jungian analyst in Virginia Beach, Virginia. |
1:38.9 | I'm Deborah Stewart, a Jungian analyst and Cape Cod. |
1:50.5 | Hello. Today on the podcast we have with us Michael Litman. And we asked Michael to join us on |
1:57.9 | the podcast today because we have all been reading about concerns over AI and everyone's talking |
2:05.1 | about AI. It seems like you can't open up a newspaper or turn on the radio without hearing about it. |
2:11.1 | But we three are woefully unknowledgeable about it. So we really needed to have an expert with us. |
2:18.6 | So Michael Litman is a university professor of computer science at Brown University where he |
2:23.8 | studies machine learning and decision making under uncertainty. He has earned multiple university |
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