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AI Future Post 5: Yin-Yang: A New Perspective on the Future of AI
When AI can write and compose, it surpasses us in various domains and alters our lives, regardless of how we feel about it. From an Eastern perspective: since the mountain will not move, the river must adapt—and it always finds a way.

Cheng Wang
3 min read


AI Future Post 4: A Dialectical Approach for Embracing the Rise of AI
Adaptability — rather than strength or intelligence — has long been recognized as the key trait for human biological survival. This quality will also be crucial for our coexistence with AI, especially for reaping its benefits. But what does it actually mean in real life?

Cheng Wang
3 min read


Future AI Post 3: Tradition Meets Innovation, Shaping the Future of AI
Our AI journey is exploration — not confrontation — and the approach is to question, converse, even debate, but not to stereotype.

Cheng Wang
3 min read


AI Future Post 2: When (and How) Collectivism Began to Take Shape
For outsiders, and even for their own people, a national culture resembles a duck gliding on water: its feet paddling beneath the surface are unseen, yet they are the essential driving force that propels it forward (or sometimes in circles).

Cheng Wang
3 min read


AI Future Post 1: The Real AI Divide Isn’t Technical—It’s Cultural
“The great divisions among humankind and the dominating source of conflict will be cultural." By Samuel P. Huntington in his book, The Clash of Civilizations. This is especially true in the realm of technology and AI.

Cheng Wang
3 min read


Case 2 for What Kills Our Conversations—and How to Bring Them to Life?
. It was fascinating to learn Dressage from Holly then and to see how humans can communicate impeccably with horses to perform art together now.
What stops us from communicating and understanding among our own kind?

Cheng Wang
6 min read


What Kills Our Conversations—and How to Bring Them to Life? Case 1: Imagine a cake‑bearing stranger at your door
As humans, we are inherently social creatures, yet we now struggle to form meaningful social connections.
So, how hard is it to just be who we are?

Cheng Wang
5 min read
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