Dr. Jasmin (Bey) Cowin published Sentient AI or Modern Myth? Anthropic’s Claude 3 Opus, Talos and the Golem of Prague

Cowin, J. (2024, April 29). Sentient AI or Modern Myth? Anthropic’s Claude 3 Opus, Talos and the Golem of Prague. Stankevicius. https://stankevicius.co/tech/sentient-ai-or-modern-myth-anthropics-claude-3-opus-talos-and-the-golem-of-prague/

Daniel Dinello, in his apocalyptic book “Technophobia!” forecasts, “Like a viral infection, technology develops into an autonomous, invasive force that expands and fulfills its dangerous potential by flourishing in the societal medium of corporate, military, and religious sustenance. Voracious in its urge to possess and engulf, technology is a parasite that frequently undermines human integrity—invisibly infiltrating, manipulating, seizing control, and mutating its human host to support its own survival and evolution. Like a virus, technology metamorphoses itself, because of unintended and uncontrollable consequences, progressively transforming the human world in the wake of its own modern changing structure.” (Dinello, 2006, p. 247)

For more, click on my column and read!

Dinello, Daniel. Technophobia!: Science Fiction Visions of Posthuman Technology, New York, USA: University of Texas Press, 2006. https://doi.org/10.7560/709546

Author: drcowinj

Dr. Jasmin (Bey) Cowin, Associate Professor at Touro University, Fulbright Scholar, SIT Graduate, past Education Policy Fellow (EPFP™) at Columbia University, Teachers College. At the heart of my professional journey is a commitment to transformative education, grounded in integrating concepts like Lynda Miller's philosophy of abundance, which counters Ruby Payne’s notion of a Culture of Poverty (2005). This philosophy emphasizes viewing experiences as assets filled with positivity and optimism, particularly valuable in an often dystopian-seeming world. My endeavors align closely with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 4: Quality Education, a goal deeply intertwined with both my personal and organizational objectives. This is evident in my work with initiatives such as Computers for Schools Burundi (CfSB), TESOL “Train the Trainer” programs in Yemen and Morocco, and my scholarly contributions including an article in the Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice (JHETP) and various workshops focused on supporting displaced learners. As an educator in the Fourth Industrial Revolution era, I recognize our crucial role in preparing the future workforce. To equip students with necessary digital literacy and technological skills, we educators must first master these areas. The technologies defining the 21st-century workforce could lead to new forms of exploitation if access is not globally democratized. By incorporating 4IR innovations in education, we shape students’ worldviews from an early age, preparing them for VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, Ambiguous) environments and ensuring they become a skilled, adaptable workforce. In conclusion, my commitment extends beyond transactional interactions, focusing instead on utilizing my skills and privileges to make a positive, enduring impact on the world.