As artificial intelligence transforms industries and human connection, how do we redefine the meaning of creativity and intelligence itself? Join us for a thought-provoking conversation exploring the evolving relationship between humans and machines in relationships, the workplace, and beyond.
Renowned neuroscientist and prolific author David Eagleman and pioneering computer scientist and AI expert Jaron Lanier will discuss how AI is reshaping the nature of human labor, creativity, and identity, from automation and innovation to ethics and empathy. Together, they’ll consider whether and, if so, how technology can enhance, rather than replace, human potential.
This event offers a rare opportunity to hear two of today’s most original thinkers share insights on how we can thrive in an AI-driven world, balancing technological progress with the unique capabilities that make us human.
David Eagleman
David Eagleman is a neuroscientist at Stanford University, an internationally bestselling author, and a Guggenheim Fellow. Eagleman’s areas of research include sensory substitution, time perception, vision, and synesthesia; he also studies the intersection of neuroscience with the legal system, and in that capacity he directs the Center for Science and Law. Eagleman is the author of many books, including Livewired, The Runaway Species, The Brain, Incognito, and Wednesday is Indigo Blue. He is also the author of a widely adopted textbook on cognitive neuroscience, Brain and Behavior, as well as a bestselling book of literary fiction, Sum, which has been translated into 32 languages, turned into two operas, and named a Best Book of the Year by Barnes and Noble. Eagleman writes for the Atlantic, New York Times, Economist, Time, Discover, Slate, Wired, and New Scientist, and appears regularly on National Public Radio and BBC to discuss both science and literature. He has been a TED speaker, a guest on the Colbert Report, and profiled in the New Yorker magazine. He has spun several neurotech companies out of his lab. He runs the top-ranking science podcast Inner Cosmos and is the writer and presenter of The Brain, an Emmy-nominated television series.
Jaron Lanier
Jaron Lanier coined the terms Virtual Reality and Mixed Reality – and had the first VR startup, manufacturing VR headsets and gloves for the first time, and creating the first surgical simulators, vehicle prototyping, and other apps – all in his youth back in the 1980s. In the 1990s he was chief scientist for Internet2 (the academic consortium charged with making sure the internet would scale) and then of the first company to do AI processing of faces, such as changing identities or adding ornaments; that company went to Google, alas. He’s also known as a constructive critic of technology. He was concerned about how the internet was turning out from way back before it was popular to do that; has written a number of bestselling books on the topic. Plenty of awards and accolades, including an IEEE Lifetime Achievement Award, the German Peace Prize for Books, one of the highest literary honors, and multiple honorary PhDs. In 2018, Wired named Jaron one of the 25 most influential figures in tech from the previous 25 years. Jaron’s also a musician specializing in unusual and obscure instruments; in the last year, he played with Sara Bareilles and T Bone Burnett on a #1 single, appeared on Colbert playing with Jon Batiste, and collaborated with Philip Glass. Officially, Jaron is Microsoft’s “Octopus,” which stands for Office of the Chief Technology Officer Prime Unifying Scientist.