Just as civilizations learned to govern fire, electricity, and nuclear energy, we must learn to govern intelligence itself.
That means ethical AI development, governance that anticipates risk, and a relentless commitment to keeping human agency at the center of technological progress.
The future will be written by those who shape AI, not those who react to it.
So the question isn’t whether AI will reshape the world - it’s whether we’ll have the wisdom to shape it first.
1000% Robert, I couldn’t agree more. The same way fire can cook a meal, it can also burn down a house, if not tended to properly. The principles of proper AI governance are no different.
Just as civilizations learned to govern fire, electricity, and nuclear energy, we must learn to govern intelligence itself.
That means ethical AI development, governance that anticipates risk, and a relentless commitment to keeping human agency at the center of technological progress.
The future will be written by those who shape AI, not those who react to it.
So the question isn’t whether AI will reshape the world - it’s whether we’ll have the wisdom to shape it first.
1000% Robert, I couldn’t agree more. The same way fire can cook a meal, it can also burn down a house, if not tended to properly. The principles of proper AI governance are no different.
Spot on, Robert: "So the question isn’t whether AI will reshape the world - it’s whether we’ll have the wisdom to shape it first."
Chara, great read, thank you for sharing!
Thank you Karo!