IIVI
Superstar
I think a part of it is the scientists and engineers who are trying to come up with novel ways to be more efficient with our resources cannot track and manipulate data like that as effectively as an A.I. That's a large part of what science and engineering is - coming up with ways to max out our resources and increase optimization.How can we expect not to work when the technology that is supposed to replace us requires material resources we know are limited and steadily decreasing?
Those predictions seem to me as blind as most economic theories. They exist in some sort of imaginary vacuum where oil and cobalt are infinite.
To see where A.I has lead to many scientific breakthroughs already in the real world, you can check this video:
Keep in mind, that video was made before ChatGPT was released which has exponentially increased productivity in the real world already.
A.I may not replace those jobs 100%, but it'll make it so only the top 5% of the graduating class will be needed - your most bright and outstanding. They'll be the ones who'll additionally be using the A.I to fine tune parameters and test things out, recursively using the A.I to collaborate rather than some graduates finishing with sub 4.0's.
This is what an M.I.T grad posted recently, so I don't think it's too far-fetched to say:
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