Phoebe Yang
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So what I really, if I need to have a charge to remember where I came from, which is I'd love to go back to my hometown in Arkansas, be with people who are a lot older than I am and hear their stories.
Because the stories of resilience around people who made it through the Depression and the World War II and even more recently, you know, some of the challenges of COVID and others, we'll have our own stories to tell, but they're really inspiring.
Peter, yes.
So that's one of my two.
And it sits right across from Saul on the road to Emmaus.
What he said when he painted it, or what Peter, the legend of Peter, is that he said, I'm not worthy to die as my Savior did.
And that was just so powerful to me.
It really sort of was grounding.
Yeah.
You know, one of the things, because I'm fresh from my class is I'll just share, you know, Socrates was afraid.
He bemoaned the invention of writing.
He thought the written texts would weaken our mental acumen and dull our memory and prevent us from developing deep wisdom.
And he prized interactive learning, right?
That's why we call Socratic discussions interactive learning.
But look at how much writing has done for us.
And with every invention, farming, fire, printing, steam power, televisions, air travel, the internet, mobile technologies.
We face similar questions where there are those who bemoan their invention and fear what they might lead to, and those who are super excited about what they might bring.
And I think AI...
is similar.
And as we sort of move into what is really human, next weekend I'll have the privilege of being the respondent to Monsignor Renzo Pogoraro at the Catholic Health Association's first AI summit.