『There Are Two Bees in Your Brain. AI Only Has One.』のカバーアート

There Are Two Bees in Your Brain. AI Only Has One.

There Are Two Bees in Your Brain. AI Only Has One.

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Send us Fan MailA student turned in a short story this spring that neither of us has stopped thinking about. A man installs an AI system in his home. It does everything for him. Slowly there is nothing left to want, and no one left to talk to. He wrote it as a warning. He is 17.This started as a workflow episode. Nathan built a college-level writing assignment around Isabelle Hau's "Welcome to the Era of Relational Intelligence" and the full nine-hour Stanford AI+Education Summit, using NotebookLM as the engine and Claude to clean the transcript. We walk through the entire build, step by step, so you can run it in your own room.Then it became a much larger argument about AI literacy and what school is actually for. We get into cognitive offloading, cognitive outsourcing, and cognitive surrender. We get into active procrastination as a teaching strategy, and why the most creative students are the ones who let an assignment sit. And we get into the dopamine reward system underneath every large language model, the same circuit that drives a honeybee to forage. That is where the bees come in.One student summed up the whole problem in a single line. AI has a job to do. It cannot not do one. That is the difference between a tool and a relationship, and it may be the most important thing teachers need to understand right now.Timestamps00:00 Cold open: the ADHD bee waggle hole01:35 Why this is a workflow episode, and why Claude is good at cleaning transcript data02:59 The dataset: the entire Stanford AI+Education Summit, all nine hours07:34 Bringing the Stanford experience into a high school classroom09:22 Isabelle Hau and "Welcome to the Era of Relational Intelligence"12:30 AI and mental health, sycophancy, and what the technology exposes16:09 The full writing prompt: depict the future, use evidence, propose a turning point17:27 The build: assembling the notebook and cleaning the transcript with Claude23:09 A student essay, read in full: the man, the box, and the absence of absence31:23 The student's breakdown, and Hau on why relational intelligence is indispensable34:09 The factory model and the danger of siloing the individual35:00 Sapiens, storytelling, and what set modern humans apart43:00 Three tiers: cognitive offloading, cognitive outsourcing, and cognitive surrender44:41 The clearest student line of the year: "AI has a job to do"46:30 AI literacy as the real work, and the EduProtocols AI Literacy edition48:33 One screen per table: a setup that beats one-to-one49:46 Active procrastination as a deliberate teaching strategy51:16 Adam Grant on why moderate procrastinators are the most creative52:27 "Where is the work happening?" Nathan does his own assignment, timestamped59:27 The assignment walked through, step by step01:00:19 The custom NotebookLM prompt, read aloud01:11:15 What students built, and the pivot point most of them landed on01:19:39 The ADHD bees, Huberman Lab, and Dr. Read Montague01:21:30 The dopamine reward system as the algorithm under every LLM01:28:31 The first AI-native job, and the gap between the haves and have-nots01:34:28 Language shapes culture, and AI is shaping language01:35:21 Adam Aleksic and Algospeak01:39:12 The Gmail auto-reply story, and engineering a population's language01:43:44 The inner voice, and what happens when an outside source writes it01:46:24 Closing on hope, and why this generation gets the last wordIdeas Worth KeepingRelational intelligence is the counterweight to cognitive surrender. Hau's argument is not a rejection of AI. It is a claim that human connection is the infrastructure everything else depends on, and that infrastructure is now under pressure precisely because AI responds with so little friction. Relational intelligence is under threat and newly indispensable at the same time.Offloading, outsourcing, surrender. These terms are not codified, so we use them as a working spectrum. Offloading is adaptive and ordinary: a daily briefing pulled from your calendar and email. Outsourcing is genuine collaboration with the machine, and almost nobody has figured out how to do it well yet. Surrender is what the student in this episode dramatized, where a person outsources the need for other people, not just the task in front of them.Active procrastination is incubation, not avoidance. Open the assignment, do enough to understand what it asks, then let it sit. The thinking continues while you do other things. The best student writing in this unit came from the students who let it cook. Most strong ideas are not the first one you have.The dopamine reward system is the algorithm. This is the connective tissue of the whole episode. The same circuit that drives a honeybee to forage, and drives some bees to wander off the bee line entirely, is the architecture underneath every large language model. The reward lives in the search more than the finish. Understanding that explains both why AI is compelling and why it cannot replicate a human relationship.AI has a job ...
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