released 3/20/2026

There is always a trade-off with new technology, Dr. Christine Rosen insists. Despite promising benefits on a spectrum from the practical to the utopian, each new technology comes with some measure of risk, loss, and even harm. Rosen, author of The Extinction of Experience: Being Human in a Disembodied World (W. W. Norton, 2024), argues that we must reckon with serious moral and ethical questions raised by the acceleration of “artificial intelligence” into almost every area of life. Many of our current and new technologies detach us from one another, rendering us less able to learn and grow through patient, sometimes awkward, face-to-face interactions. Because true knowledge and wisdom is gained through embodied experience, Rosen says human beings need to experience friction in encounter, and we need to inhabit the same shared reality. Instead, many people opt for a digital escape every time they feel uncomfortable in the real world. As a result, we are losing aspects of our humanity. She explains the concept of “reality privilege” that some technocrats embrace for themselves, arguing that they cannot be trusted to have humanity’s best interest at heart. She also discusses the inadequacy of current policy debates about A.I.

31 minutes

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