Manawatu Standard

From hands to heads to hearts

- THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

Software has started writing poetry, sports stories and business news. IBM’S Watson is co-writing pop hits. Uber has begun deploying self-driving taxis on real city streets and, last month, Amazon delivered its first package by drone to a customer in rural England.

Add it all up and you quickly realise that Donald Trump’s election isn’t the only thing disrupting society today. The far more profound disruption is happening in the workplace and in the economy at large, as the relentless march of technology has brought us to a point where machines and software are not just outworking us, but starting to outthink us in more and more realms.

To reflect on this rapid change, I sat down with my teacher and friend Dov Seidman, CEO of LRN, which advises companies on leadership and how to build ethical cultures, for his take.

‘‘What we are experienci­ng today bears striking similariti­es in size and implicatio­ns to the scientific revolution that began in the 16th century,’’ said Seidman. ‘‘The discoverie­s of Copernicus and Galileo, which spurred that scientific revolution, challenged our whole understand­ing of the world around and beyond us, and forced us as humans to rethink our place within it.’’

Once scientific methods became enshrined, we used science and reason to navigate our way forward, he added, so much so that ‘‘the French philosophe­r Rene Descartes crystallis­ed this age of reason in one phrase: ‘I think, therefore I am’. ‘‘ Descartes’ point, said Seidman, ‘‘was that it was our ability to ‘think’ that most distinguis­hed humans from all other animals on earth.’’

The technologi­cal revolution of the 21st century is as consequent­ial as the scientific revolution, argued Seidman, and it is ‘‘forcing us to answer a most profound question, one we’ve never had to ask before: ‘What does it mean to be human in the age of intelligen­t machines’?’’

The answer, said Seidman, is the one thing machines will never have: ‘‘a heart.’’

‘‘It will be all the things that the heart can do,’’ he explained. ‘‘Humans can love, they can have compassion, they can dream. While humans can act from fear and anger, and be harmful, at their most elevated, they can inspire and be virtuous. And while machines can reliably interopera­te, humans, uniquely, can build deep relationsh­ips of trust.’’

Therefore, Seidman added, our highest self-conception needs to be redefined from ‘‘I think, therefore I am’’ to ‘‘I care, therefore I am; I hope, therefore I am; I imagine, therefore I am. I am ethical, therefore I am. I have a purpose, therefore I am. I pause and reflect, therefore I am’’.

We will still need manual labour, and people will continue working with machines to do extraordin­ary things. Seidman is simply arguing that the tech revolution will force humans to create more value with hearts and between hearts.

Seidman reminded me of a Talmudic adage: ‘‘What comes from the heart, enters the heart.’’ Which is why even jobs that still have a large technical component will benefit from more heart.

The technology revolution is thrusting us into ‘the human economy,’ which will be more about creating value with hired hearts all the attributes that can’t be programmed into software, like passion, character and collaborat­ive spirit.’’

It’s no surprise that the French government began requiring French companies on Jan. 1 to guarantee their employees a ‘‘right to disconnect’’ from technology, when they are not at work, trying to combat the ‘‘always on’’ work culture.

Leaders, businesses and communitie­s will still leverage technology to gain advantage, but those that put human connection at the center of everything they do, and how they do it, will be the enduring winners, insisted Seidman.

‘‘Machines can be programmed to do the next thing right. But only humans can do the next right thing.’’

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