In this episode we dive deeper into the role of AI in work, as work accounts for a great part of our time. Can AI help us experience more happiness in our work? Will it lead to less tedious work? What do we think about AI booking agents sending marketing messages to other AI agents? Do we have and do we want to use the data? Will AI create more serendipitous moments at work?
Shownotes:
Developments within the world of AI and discussions around it change very quickly, so it is always worth trying to keep up-to-date with news and analysis in newspapers and journals. John Naughton in The Guardian, for example, often writes perceptively and critically about tech. The Financial Times is also an excellent source of news and analysis from a range of perspectives.
Books, as always, are the best place to visit for thoughtful and reflective insights. A couple of books that we referred to in the series might be of interest for further reading:
Bryan Alexander. (2020). Academia next: The futures of Higher Education. Johns Hopkins University Press
Salman Khan. (2024). Brave new words: How AI will revolutionize education (and why that’s a good thing). Viking
Franssen, Tim (2024) In onze Tijd, leven in het calamiteiten-tijdperk. Alfabet Uitgevers
Some specific articles we referred to may be of interest for up-to-date(ish) perspectives on specific topics:
Stephen Bush. (April 1, 2025). Anime lessons in the limits of AI. Financial Times.
Jemima Kelly. (March 23, 2025). My date used AI to psychologically profile me. Is that OK? Financial Times
Sarah O’Connor. (March 25, 2025). A white-collar world without juniors. Financial Times.
Podcasts we recommend:
AI Report
Lex Friedman & Amanda Askell & Amodei Dario from Anthropic
AI-tussenuurtje
Music for each episode from Uppbeat (free for Creators!):
https://uppbeat.io/t/sky-toes/the-long-ride-home
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