
The opinions expressed by business taxpayers are their own.
The drum of the advances of AI is relentless, and almost always accompanied by the question: what does this mean for our jobs? In the classrooms, joints and tables, the same fear continues to arise: will he replace me? What will happen to my work, my career, my purpose?
Instead of shrinking with fear, what happens if we embrace this as our time to grow? What would happen if we could rethink the question completely? Instead of seeing AI as an imminent threat, what happens if we saw it as an opportunity and we reflect on our inexplored potential adjustment or bread in our obsolescence?
Maybe a better question could be: what can I do that AI can never replicate? The answer is not to compete with machines, but to bow more deeply in what makes us human.
Related: AI is an answer, but not the only answer: here you can’t replace humans
Absolute intelligence
This is the time to awaken our absolute intelligence: the unique capacity of creativity, compassion and consciousness. While AI can generate answers in milliseconds, only humans can generate meaning. It is our ability to connect ideas, feel empathy and imagine new realities that give their context, and their direction.
We must help the next generation to understand that they were not only born with intelligence, but also of absolute intelligence, an intelligence that the machines are replicated. His creativity, his empathy, his ability to connect deeply with others: these are the gifts that will take us through the era of AI towards a brighter future for all of us.
This idea has been in depth by the international humanitarian and spiritual leader Gurudev Sri Ravi Shankar, who attracts a clear distinction between AI and what he calls “absolute intelligence”: our innate and unlimited potential.
Now the question arises: how do we access this absolute intelligence?
How to access absolute intelligence
Start with mastering our own minds. The ability to observe and manage our thoughts and emotions is the first step. Breathing and meditation techniques are invaluable, simple but deep tools, which help establish the mind and connect with our internal source force. When we are in contact with this internal energy deposit, we can not only handle our negative stress and emotions better, but we can also connect with ethers more significantly, thus improving mutual and stressful trust.
With a regular meditation practice, we can overcome the fear of the unknown, navigate the uncertainty more clearly and cultivate a quiet and focused awareness. This internal stillness is the source of creativity and intuition, and the entrance door to absolute intelligence.
We have all heard of the old saying: “Your attitude determines your altitude.” I would say that this makes a lot of sense in our current context. We would do well to adopt a critical change in our mentality: go from reacting to the response with conscience when they face challenges and uncertainty.
History shows us what happens when societies resist innovation. In the 1990s, the United States bowed towards the Internet and digital tools, while parts of Europe doubted, and the resulting innovation gap still resonates today. We cannot afford to let fear or hesitation stop us. The real opportunity with AI is not just staying up to date; It is leading with integrity, curiosity and awareness. This is how we not only adapt to the future, we help define it.
Related: thriving in the AI era: where humans have the advantage
I remember the first discussions in one of my postgraduate classes at the University of Southern California, when the field was still in his childhood. At that time, our challenge was to model fundamental aspects of brain function, particularly in areas such as artificial vision and image processing. We explore if the biological inspiration visual systems could be applied to complex problems such as automatic detection of disorderly envy objectives or autonomous navigation for robots, on land and underwater.
What once seemed that theoretical exploration has become a practical reality, with these innovations playing a fundamental role in improving security, advancing in exploration and improving the quality of life of real life.
Shaping the future
In essence, AI is an extraordinary tool. But it is still just a reflection of the intelligence that created it. And that is the deepest truth: the future does not belong only to artificial intelligence. It belongs to those who know how to ask the right questions, build with wisdom and lead with the unique human characteristics that machines can never imitate.
And although AI can imitate language and predict behavior, it cannot replicate the basis of trust that supports human society. Trust is based on the two pillars of connection and competition. And no algorithm can replace the heat of a friend, the presence of a mentor or the sense of belonging that comes from shared human experience.
We are not here to fear what we believe. We are here to evolve with him.
AI is not the enemy of human progress; It is a catalyst. It offers us a rare opportunity to advance: accelerate innovation, depend on vision and expand our collective potential. But to take advantage of this, we must release the adverse lens through which we see the unknown.
Related: The perfect mixture: How to combine successful and human approaches for business successful
Instead of preparing for interruption, what happens if we welcome the discovery? What happens if we replace fear with curiosity, resistance with openness and consciousness? When we find the future with confidence in our deepest intelligence, we not only shape technology, we raise it.
By taking advantage of absolute intelligence as our guide, we can move towards a future that is not only faster but more significant. A future in which AI amplifies human ingenuity does not replace it. A future defined not by competition with machines, but by collaboration, with a purpose, with the heart and with the highest vision of what humanity can become.
The drum of the advances of AI is relentless, and almost always accompanied by the question: what does this mean for our jobs? In the classrooms, joints and tables, the same fear continues to arise: will he replace me? What will happen to my work, my career, my purpose?
Instead of shrinking with fear, what happens if we embrace this as our time to grow? What would happen if we could rethink the question completely? Instead of seeing AI as an imminent threat, what happens if we saw it as an opportunity and we reflect on our inexplored potential adjustment or bread in our obsolescence?
Maybe a better question could be: what can I do that AI can never replicate? The answer is not to compete with machines, but to bow more deeply in what makes us human.
The rest of this article is blocked.
Join the entrepreneur+ + Today for access.