Your thoughts from AI to giving are great and I am happy to be included... I worked 15 Years with really troublemaker kids in Chicago and they became my great teachers. now my thaughts to your article: if I get a gift I would like to feel the interaction with the person who gave it to me
the person , who tried to figure out what would make me happy...a story: A teenager with great skills to organize a crime, can use his strategy for intensity in a save way by working in a gas station. There he can live intensity all day long: all day long people are coming and in a few minutes he will be able to get them feel good about themselves.... the creativity in doing so is endless. .. It is a real me - to we -
to us.... sometimes it is a smile and a look in the eyes, sometimes in looking together to the clouds in the sky, sometimes to feel the soil or to let the wind stroke your face.... sometimes just asking what he or she likes to do for living.... it is about relationship, about intensity what is always better, saver and healthier than drugs. In this way they never will be in danger to be caught by the police.
I don t know if this makes sense - it is so simply and so hard to understand..... if the dreams of the kids come together with the wisdom of the old ones - we will gentle rock the world - everybody wants to do something worthwhile and wants to be recognized - That is intensity...
I could go on and on: one Example what I think is very important in the AI discussion: many years ago I studied aliens and now I have an 11 year old grandson who claims to be an alien. he is very very smart. Aliens can do everything but they don t have feelings and they try to get them from us human beings. aliens are like AI - they never can outsmart us... only if we give them permission.....
facit: it is all about intensity! we have to teach and to learn heart intelligence as specifically as an instrument, sport or any specific subject - in order to decide ourselves where, how and with whom we want to live intensity
This is the wisdom of the children whom I listen to
the Oglala Sioux people in South Dakota find better words: “Their sense of community, of connection to each other and to their land, made me feel more happy and alive than I’ve ever felt before,” he says. “I think people are craving real human interaction -- it’s like an instinct. We now have the opportunity to use technology to help us get there.”
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