Sam Altman - The Man Creating Our Cognitive Future - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

13/04/2025 22 min Episodio 202
Sam Altman - The Man Creating Our Cognitive Future - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

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Episode Synopsis

Sam Altman - The Man Creating Our Cognitive Future
The Deeper Thinking Podcast
What happens when machines stop waiting for input and begin to anticipate you? In this episode, we unpack Sam Altman’s TED2025 conversation with TED curator Chris Anderson—not to debate AI’s dangers or promises, but to trace what it reveals about authorship, memory, agency, and power. This is not just about a future we are building. It’s about a system we’re already inside.
AI is no longer framed as tool, but as presence. A memory that accumulates. A voice that preempts. As Bernard Stiegler wrote, technics are not just extensions of the body—they are prosthetics of memory. And in this episode, memory becomes infrastructure. Through Altman’s calm precision, we hear not certainty but recursion—echoes of Simone Weil’s claim that attention is an act of devotion, and Hannah Arendt’s insistence that every birth is a beginning of a new world, whether we intend it or not.
The episode also surfaces contradictions between openness and control, ambient design and algorithmic authorship. As Byung-Chul Han warns, transparency can flatten trust into performance. And Gloria Anzaldúa reminds us that contradiction is not a flaw—it is the texture of reality. This episode listens for the textures Altman doesn’t name, but performs: recursion, proximity, the ambient structure of systems that speak before we do.
Why Listen?

Explore AI as atmosphere, not interface
Understand how memory, trust, and agency are being restructured
Hear Altman’s own words—with quote fidelity—against deep theory
Engage thinkers from Weil to Moten, Virilio to Simondon

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What We Learned Along the Way

Bernard Stiegler: Frames technics as memory prosthetics—technologies that rewire cognition through time.
Simone Weil: Understands attention as sacred discipline and moral action, relevant to AI’s pre-emptive design.
Hannah Arendt: Offers a politics of beginning that disrupts deterministic views of technological evolution.
Byung-Chul Han: Critiques transparency as a neoliberal control logic cloaked in openness.
Gloria Anzaldúa: Validates contradiction as epistemology—central to understanding algorithmic paradox.
Fred Moten: Writes from the break—where performance, refusal, and improvisation co-author meaning.
Paul Virilio: Defines speed as political vector—accelerated systems and compressed agency.
Gilbert Simondon: Reconceives individuation and the technical object as co-emergent, not separate.
Roland Barthes: Questions authorship—relevant to Altman’s ambiguous role in shaping language models.
Sheila Jasanoff: Introduces “technologies of humility” as a framework for responsible AI governance.

The system is already speaking. The question is—who taught it to listen like that?
#SamAltman #AI #BernardStiegler #SimoneWeil #HannahArendt #ByungChulHan #FredMoten #PaulVirilio #GloriaAnzaldúa #GilbertSimondon #TheDeeperThinkingPodcast #Authorship #Trust #Futurity #Memory #Prosthetics #AmbientAI

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