59. Finding Meaning in Work
Are you part of the 45% of high-skilled professionals that would trade some salary for more meaning at work? Weâre all searching for that âwhyâ behind what we do. Is it impact, growth, or just not dreading Mondays? If youâre picking a job just for the bragging rights, philosophy is here to call you out and nudge you toward what actually lights you up. đĄ If youâve ever found yourself staring at your laptop and thinking, âWhy am I really doing this?â youâre in good company. I recently sat down with Victoria Feldman for a conversation about how philosophy can help us find meaning at work, and how AI fits into the picture. đș Click on the image below to watch the video of the interview. đș Letâs start with the classics. Epicurus and the Stoics were obsessed with what makes a good life. Epicurus would say, stop chasing glitter and focus on what truly matters, like friendships. The Stoics? Theyâd tell you to channel your energy into what you can actually influence, not the endless swirl of things you canât. Instead of trying to find happiness (which, letâs be honest, is a pretty daunting goal), they suggested we focus on removing pain as much as possible (much more doable, right?). Itâs a bit like swapping out your bucket list for a âthings I wonât tolerateâ list. When it comes to technology, itâs a mixed bag. Take healthcare: I met a nurse who now uses voice memos and AI to write her reports. What used to take her two hours at the end of every shift is now automated, freeing her up for what really matters: caring for patients. On the flip side, doctors often spend more time typing into computers (mine uses only two fingers đ) than actually looking patients in the eye. So, AI can either give us back our time for meaningful work or take us away from human relationships. I guess itâs all about how we use it. So, whatâs my takeaway for you? Be clear about your values. Donât get lost chasing every shiny title or the endless checklist of what a âperfectâ job should look like. Focus on the few things that genuinely nourish you. Choose work that aligns with what matters most to you, and try to contribute to something bigger than yourself, something you can be proud of. And remember, questioning everything is not just allowed, itâs encouraged (that's what philosophy is all about). #AI #Ethics #AIEthics #Philosophy #Technology #PhilosophyBFF #TheFrenchPhilosopher #FrenchPhilosopher #meaningfulwork #career #workculture #selfreflection #wellbeing #ancientwisdom #stoicism #epicurus #mindset
58. Does AI make better decisions than humans?
Imagine a machine deciding who gets life-saving surgery in a split-second, armed with endless data and razor-sharp logic. No hesitation, no bias, no emotional baggage. Sounds like a dream... or does it? What do you think: does AI make better decisions than humans? Well, itâs true that there are no existential crises or coffee breaks for our robot friends. Theyâre brilliant at optimize outcomes by crunching numbers, without getting tired, distracted, or irrational. Some chatbots actually even give good moral advice (one could say better than some philosophers? đ ). Have a look if youâre curious: petersinger.ai. But hereâs the kicker, machines donât actually âunderstandâ morality. Why is that? Because they donât feel empathy or anguish when making tough calls. They donât lose sleep over the weight of their decisions. They donât consider the messy, lived experiences of the people affected by them. Take existentialists like Simone de Beauvoir (yes, weâre name-dropping). Theyâd argue that morality is rooted in freedom and authenticity, every decision we make defines who we are and carries the weight of our responsibility to others. Machines? They donât have freedom, theyâre programmed. They donât have authenticity, theyâre mimicking patterns. Theyâre not moral agents, theyâre tools. But hereâs where things get spicy. AI can actually push us to think deeper about our own ethical frameworks. By exposing our biases and presenting alternative perspectives, it can sharpen our reasoning and force us to confront uncomfortable truths. For instance, Amazonâs AI recruiting tool 10 years ago was a fiasco but it helped everyone realize how deep recruiting biases are, and that was definitely a win to make us aware that we had to fight against them. So maybe the question isnât whether AI is âbetterâ at morality but whether it challenges us to be better moral thinkers ourselves? Should we trust AI with big decisions? Maybe as collaborators, not captains of the ship. Machines might help us see clearer, but the messy beauty of morality, its empathy, its anguish, its humanity, is something only we can bring to the table. Or at least thatâs my take⊠whatâs yours?
57. What Are Animals Saying About Us? Ask AI
Using AI to translate animal communication isnât just a tech challenge. Itâs a philosophical one. AI is making serious moves in decoding animal sounds (listen to this podcast episode from The Economist), but hereâs the kicker: even if we crack their âlanguage,â would it make sense to us? I'm really not sure we can ever truly understand what animals are saying when their entire experience of the world is so different from ours! How can we figure what it's like to be bats âseeingâ with sound. Or birds feeling Earthâs magnetic fields. And what about dolphins living in a 3D underwater soundscape. Don't let me start with how weâre here struggling to swat a fly because it sees us in slow motion.đ€Šâïž If AI manages to translate what animals say, it might force us to rethink language, meaning, and our place in nature. Because what does that say about how we treat them? Imagine if we discover theyâre saying profound things like, âHey, donât overfish my homeâ? I'm curious... if you could chat with a dolphin, whatâs the first thing youâd ask? Better yet, what do you think theyâd roast us for? đ
56. Schrödingerâs Cat Just Got An Upgrade!
Word on the street is Microsoftâs latest quantum breakthrough (see Natureâs article link below) might finally let us crack open the box and see whatâs really going on. But hereâs the kicker: quantum computing isnât just about faster tech or breaking encryption. Itâs a philosophical mic drop. What if reality isnât just yes or no? What if itâs yes AND no⊠or maybe even something else entirely? See, quantum computers donât follow the same rules as our everyday classical computers. They thrive in the chaos, living in that weird, paradoxical space where things can be two things at once. Itâs like the universe is giving us a hint that weâve been thinking way too small all the time. Human level thinking will probably always be too small to understand it all. It doesnât stop us for craving more anyway! While engineers are out here solving problems we didnât even think actually had solutions, philosophers might buckle up to be ready for a world where zero and one can coexist. Where truth isnât fixed but fluid? Where the impossible suddenly feels like itâs just around the corner? Strap in, this isnât just science anymore. Itâs a whole new way of seeing reality! How could our world react to such a weird perspective to grasp? When we see human beings kill each other for failing to see the world the same way, Iâm not overly optimistic about human kind capacity to fully apprehend quantum physics. But maybe itâs fine not to understand how quantum computing works if we can benefit from it. Or is it?
55. Where Does My Freedom End and Yours Begin?
Freedom sounds simpleâdo what you want, right? But John Stuart Mill had a different take (heâs a 19th-century philosopher who spent a lot of time thinking about this, so pretty legit). He believed that liberty comes with one big condition: youâre free to do whatever you like, as long as you donât harm others. Sounds fair enough, doesnât it? But when you really think about it, this idea of âdonât harm othersâ gets complicated fast. For Mill, freedom wasnât just about doing your own thingâit was about understanding how your actions affect the people around you. Liberty, he thought, isnât something we keep to ourselves; itâs something we share. Now, letâs bring this into todayâs world Think about all the big issues on the global stageâpeace talks, climate change policies, trade negotiations. These are all about the same question Mill asked: where does my freedom end and yours begin? Can one country pursue its own goals without stepping on anotherâs toes? Take peace talks as an example One nation might feel justified in defending its borders or expanding its influence, while another sees those actions as threats to their sovereignty or safety. Mill would argue that true freedom doesnât mean ignoring these tensionsâit means recognizing how actions ripple outward and finding ways to address those ripples responsibly. His principle of ânon-nuisanceâ isnât just a moral ideaâitâs a practical guide for resolving conflicts and building trust. And then thereâs climate agreements One country might say, âWe need more factories to grow our economy,â while another says, âYour growth is destroying our environment.â Again, Mill would remind us that freedom isnât just about personal or national gainâitâs about understanding how interconnected we all are and making choices that respect those connections. And what about compromise? Mill believed that freedom works best when itâs built on conversation. The best solutions donât come from one side winning and the other losingâthey come from honest dialogue where both sides figure out how to move forward together. Itâs not easy, but itâs how progress happens. Are we living up to Millâs vision of freedom today? Are we using our liberties to build bridges or just digging deeper trenches? Every negotiationâwhether itâs between nations or neighborsâis a chance to show whether we can balance our rights with our responsibilities to each other. Mill would remind us that freedom isnât just about doing whatever we wantâitâs about finding ways to live together without harming each other. Thatâs where real liberty begins. What do you think? Iâd love to hear your thoughts on how Millâs ideas apply today.