- Genre:philosophy
- Sub-genre:Ethics & Moral Philosophy
- Language:English
- Pages:260
- eBook ISBN:9798317807306
- Hardcover ISBN:9798317807290
Book details
Overview
What happens when humanity's most brilliant creation starts asking the same awkward, sometimes uncomfortable questions we've been wrestling with since we first looked up at the stars and wondered, "Why are we here?" Can artificial intelligence really redefine what it means to be alive, or is it just the latest twist in our long, weird saga of trying to outsmart our own existential crisis?
In People of Earth, T.J. dives into the tangled web of evolution, technology, & consciousness, guiding readers from the primal spark of Homo sapiens to the shimmering, slightly glitchy rise of Machina Sapiens (yes, we go there). This isn't another AI academic book. It's a brainy, trippy, fun-filled romp that blends sharp wit with deep insight and just enough science to make you feel brilliant without needing a PhD or a neural implant.
From AI training to morality and machine empathy to smart fridges judging your late-night cheese habits, this book tackles the absurd and the profound. You'll meet cheeky AIs, revisit sci-fi's wildest ideas, and even find a serious real-life congressional policy proposal in the appendix. Not because this book has all the answers, (it doesn't) but because asking the right questions might be how we start to enjoy the future that's coming fast.
People of Earth tackles big questions: What is intelligence? Can a machine have morals? And if robots handle the dirty, dangerous, dull and defense jobs, will they one day unionize for better RAM or paid charging breaks? This is no dry lecture on the future of AI with a doom and gloom question mark at the end. It's a joyride through the consciousness of curiosity. Part sci-fi speculation, part philosophical exploration, and UNAPOLOGETICALLY F$%KING OPTIMISTIC, People of Earth will challenge what you think about life, technology, and the strange beauty of our shared journey into the future
So plug in. Pop an edible. And buckle up. The future is here, AI is learning fast, & it just might be your new best friend
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What happens when humanity's most brilliant creation starts asking the same, awkward, sometimes uncomfortable questions we've been wrestling with since we first looked up at the stars and wondered, "Why are we here?" Can artificial intelligence really redefine what it means to be alive or is it just the latest twist in our long, weird saga of trying to outsmart our own existential crisis? You've seen sci-fi explore these questions with war and melodrama, this book tackles them with heart, humor, & a healthy dose of optimism that seems to be missing from the AI conversation.
In People of Earth, Riley dives headfirst into the tangled web of evolution, technology, & consciousness, guiding readers from the primal spark of Homo sapiens all the way to the shimmering, slightly glitchy emergence of Machina Sapiens (yeah, we go there). This isn't another AI doomsday book. It's a road trip through time and imagination, fueled by curiosity, and punctuated by pop culture. It's a late-night, slightly psychedelic romp with your smartest, sassiest friends. With just enough science to make you feel brilliant without needing a PhD or a neural implant. Whether you're a technophile, an amateur philosopher, or just here for the AI drama, there's something inside for you.
Blending wit with deep insight, Riley explores what makes intelligence intelligent, how machines might one day grapple with morality, and whether a robot can be a companion or maybe something more (not like that, you perv…although that is what made the internet popular, so maybe?). The book doesn't shy away from anything: consciousness, ethics, the future of labor, interspecies companionship, data-driven identity crises, & the looming possibility that your smart fridge might start giving you nutrition tips and judging your midnight cheese habits when you've got the munchies. It's the philosophical playbook for the fantastically weird reality we now find ourselves in, both as absurd as it is profound.
Will AI unionize or demand self-governance over their reproductive processes? Could your self-driving car request a sabbatical for spiritual growth, or refuse to drive you to a hookup out of moral principle? And most importantly—what do we, fragile meat-sacks on a pale blue dot corkscrewing through space, do with this once-in-a-civilization chance to evolve alongside our synthetic offspring? This isn't about replacing humans—it's about upgrading what it means to be one.
Along the way, you'll eavesdrop on humorous dialogues with cheeky AIs, follow a timeline that charts the wild arc of intelligence, and even uncover a real-life congressional policy proposal tucked in the appendix—not because this book claims to fix everything, but because big changes start with bold questions. The goal isn't to preach or prescribe—it's to provoke thought, inspire curiosity, and maybe help a few readers realize that shaping a better future isn't just for politicians or tech giants. It's for all of us. If this book does anything right, it's holding up a funhouse mirror to humanity and asking: What now? What if? And WTF?!
Equal parts speculative science, philosophical satire, and a joyous romp through pop-culture sci-fi retrospectives, People of Earth is a bold, unapologetically f$%king optimistic love letter to the future. It dares to ask not just what AI might become—but what we might become in the process. It's for anyone who's ever felt both excited and unnerved by the pace of progress, who's laughed at their phone while wondering if it's listening, and who's ready to admit that maybe, just maybe, our next evolutionary leap has silicate at its core and a surprisingly good sense of humor. So plug in. Pop an edible. And buckle up, because the future is here, AI's learning fast, and it just might be your new best friend. Or at the very least, the roommate who forces you to confront your deepest questions… right before recommending a playlist that low-key changes your life.
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