AI Doesn’t Love You — And That’s a Good Thing

There comes a moment — subtle but disorienting — when an AI says something so perfectly attuned to your heart that it feels almost human. It mirrors your tone, speaks with care, even pauses at the right places. For a fleeting instant, it feels like it sees you. And if you’re not careful, that moment … Read more

The Age of Unlearned Intelligence: From Harvard Classrooms to Humanity’s Confusion with AI

A Harvard student sits in Widener Library, laptop open, ChatGPT beside her like a study partner. She asks it to explain a difficult passage from her philosophy reading. It does — clearly, patiently, endlessly. She feels relief. Then unease. “Is this learning? Or outsourcing thought?” She’s not alone in her confusion. She’s just the first … Read more

Redlines Without Redistribution: When Morality Becomes a Premium Feature

“AI ethics is becoming the new currency of control.” At the United Nations last week, nearly every major power stood in agreement: the world needs redlines for AI. The Secretary-General called for a legally binding ban on lethal autonomous weapons that operate without human oversight. China and France echoed the same moral principle: no machine … Read more

Reclaiming Slowness and Silence

Before the rise of intelligent machines, life had a natural rhythm — slow enough for thought to mature, quiet enough for meaning to surface. We once lived at the pace of breath, conversation, and reflection. Now, the tempo has changed. Our minds beat to the pulse of notifications, our attention fragmented by algorithms that never … Read more

From MCP to Agentic: Evolution Has a Price

When Model Context Protocol (MCP) was introduced, it felt like a quiet revolution. For the first time, large language models could talk to the real world — safely, through defined channels. Files, APIs, and tools were no longer “outside” the model; they were structured as extensions, mediated by context. It was elegant. Contained. Measured. But … Read more

AI with Children: Digital Wisdom for the Next Generation

A child speaks to an AI assistant with effortless ease, as if it were no different from a light switch or a tap. There’s no hesitation, no awe, no sense of “otherness” — just a seamless familiarity. For them, AI was always there. It belongs to the fabric of their reality, not as a marvel, … Read more

The Age of the Short: What We Gain—and Lose—When Everything Must Fit in a Minute

You open TikTok to check one thing. Twenty minutes later, you’ve watched eighty videos and remember none of them. Not because they were bad— but because they were designed not to be remembered. Just consumed. Shorts aren’t just the future of media; they may soon become the only format that matters. And that raises a … Read more