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STAT+: What the pope’s encyclical on AI means for Catholic hospitals, and all of health care
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The sequel to last week’s graduation speeches that garnered boos for AI: Comedian Ronny Chieng addressed Harvard’s graduating class and told them their mission was to “destroy AI,” which prompted a roar of approval.
He wasn’t referring to uses of AI in medicine and physics, he specified, but rather offloading writing and creating to AI. The journey of making and learning and figuring out is “the point of all of this,” he said. “Why would I want AI to take that away from me?”
You’re reading the web edition of STAT’s AI Prognosis newsletter, our subscriber-exclusive guide to artificial intelligence in health care and medicine. Sign up to get it delivered in your inbox every Wednesday.
The sequel to last week’s graduation speeches that garnered boos for AI: Comedian Ronny Chieng addressed Harvard’s graduating class and told them their mission was to “destroy AI,” which prompted a roar of approval.
He wasn’t referring to uses of AI in medicine and physics, he specified, but rather offloading writing and creating to AI. The journey of making and learning and figuring out is “the point of all of this,” he said. “Why would I want AI to take that away from me?”