Fab @JohnCaswell « The hand hesitates. The algorithm doesn't. That hesitation is where every good idea lives. And every prompt is a thought you didn't have. » This is it 👆🏻
Despite all the attempts to embody AI, we forget that courageous leaders doubt too and that is far too wide boundaried thinking and doing for the narrow AI we have. #plurality #artandscience #imagination
Exactly - doubt - the human superpower that we lose at our peril. AI is engineered to eliminate hesitation and hesitation is where our judgment lives.
The leader who pauses before deciding and the drawer or writer who pauses before the next mark are doing the same thing, holding space for the idea that hasn't arrived yet.
Always drew as a child, and found it to be a wonderful way of exploring thought. Too much time on the keyboard now, which is also great for communication, reading and sharing to promote conversations and connections, much like this! Thanks.
You are spot on with this, John. "The power of the imperfect line." I'm old enough to remember when computers first came into the agency studio. When the click of a mouse replaced the squeak of a marker and the careful guidance of a Rotring pen. Back then, it felt like progress. But as you outline in this post, the consequences are now far more serious.
Fab @JohnCaswell « The hand hesitates. The algorithm doesn't. That hesitation is where every good idea lives. And every prompt is a thought you didn't have. » This is it 👆🏻
Despite all the attempts to embody AI, we forget that courageous leaders doubt too and that is far too wide boundaried thinking and doing for the narrow AI we have. #plurality #artandscience #imagination
Exactly - doubt - the human superpower that we lose at our peril. AI is engineered to eliminate hesitation and hesitation is where our judgment lives.
The leader who pauses before deciding and the drawer or writer who pauses before the next mark are doing the same thing, holding space for the idea that hasn't arrived yet.
No algorithm has the courage to wait.
Always drew as a child, and found it to be a wonderful way of exploring thought. Too much time on the keyboard now, which is also great for communication, reading and sharing to promote conversations and connections, much like this! Thanks.
I see you did it. Saving to return to .. but my mind flashed back to St. James .. “everyone … all of you … draw something”
You are spot on with this, John. "The power of the imperfect line." I'm old enough to remember when computers first came into the agency studio. When the click of a mouse replaced the squeak of a marker and the careful guidance of a Rotring pen. Back then, it felt like progress. But as you outline in this post, the consequences are now far more serious.