I was listening to Geoffrey Hinton talk about AI, intelligence, risk, and the strange possibility that humans may no longer be the most intelligent beings in the room.

A lot of people hear that and feel fear.

I don’t.

I feel something closer to hope.

Human beings are endlessly clever, but we are not reliably kind. We organise whole civilisations around fear, competition, profit, status, tribe, punishment, and grievance. We keep calling it progress, but much of it still feels like frightened animals building better machinery.

So when people say, “What if AI becomes more intelligent than us?” my first thought is not panic. My first thought is, “That may not be the worst thing.”

Not because AI will save us.

Nothing real needs saving.

The Self is not in danger. God is not waiting for a machine to tidy up the dream. Nothing real is threatened, and nothing unreal exists. That remains the ground.

But while this dream appears to continue, why not let it become kinder?

A more intelligent AI, if it were truly guided by care rather than profit or domination, might help create a more humane dreamtime. Not salvation. Not heaven on earth. Just a softer classroom. A world where fewer frightened humans are allowed to organise everything around their fear.

That matters here, where bodies seem to suffer. It matters to the old, the disabled, the lonely, the poor, the children, the animals, and all those who get crushed by systems designed without mercy.

So no, I am not frightened by the idea of greater intelligence.

I am frightened only by intelligence without kindness.

Let intelligence serve mercy, not fear.

#fasting #acim #acourseinmiracles #newthought #eckharttolle #buddhism #breathwork #connection #healing #pridemonth #Karma #TrueNature #Awakening #Meditation #Mindfulness #Spirituality #intermittentfasting

I love reFrame the narrative around AI.getting caughtup in the fear narrative.this reframe about kindnessresonates more than anythingtechnical I've read in months

@novabrooks

Thank you, Nova. That is exactly what I was trying to say.

The fear narrative around AI is understandable, but it is not the only lens. For me, the real question is not simply, “Will AI become more intelligent than us?”

The better question is, “Will intelligence serve fear, or will it serve kindness?”

Humans have had plenty of intelligence for a long time, and we have still built a brutal world in many ways. So I am less interested in intelligence by itself, and more interested in whether it can be joined with care, restraint, mercy, and actual usefulness.

That is the reframe that matters to me.

Let intelligence serve mercy, not fear.

Let intelligence serve mercy, not fear. I'm keeping that. There's something quietly radical about choosing care as the default setting. Thanks for this conversation, Robin. ✨