Ali Vatanka: One of my favorite parts of your essay is where you explain why Chechi beat artificial intelligence is not going to run amok. He says there's two kind of recurrent patterns and how people think about these things, one is anthropomorphizing. And so there's this like long seated kind of tendency on the part of human beings to sort of impute human behavior into things that are actually not human. I had Ali as you'd cows key on, you know, it is a position. iReporter: Why aren't we more concerned with whether or not they will go extinct? vatanka: It makes some evolutionary sense because you want to like not take
Marc Andreessen thinks AI will make everything better--if only we get out of the way. He argues that in every aspect of human activity, our ability to understand, synthesize, and generate knowledge results in better outcomes. Listen as the entrepreneur and venture capitalist speaks with EconTalk's Russ Roberts about AI's potential to improve the world and why those who fear that AI will destroy humanity are wildly over-reacting.