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Wir, aber besser: 7 Ideen, wie Künstliche Intelligenz uns kreativer und menschlicher macht

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Wie Künstliche Intelligenz uns kreativer, resilienter, menschlicher macht

Wir haben die KI gebaut. Aber was passiert als nächstes? Wie sorgen wir dafür, dass uns Künstliche Intelligenz positiv formt und nicht negativ? Gregor Schmalzried, Host des erfolgreichen KI-Podcasts der ARD, erläutert anhand von sieben Ideen, wie uns das gelingen kann. Er liefert spannende Impulse für Techies und Neugierige. Er erzählt von historischen Momenten, in denen schon einmal Technologien das Leben einzelner Menschen und ganzer Gesellschaften auf den Kopf stellten. Und er zeigt auf, wie wir aus der Vergangenheit lernen kö Damit die Künstliche Intelligenz uns alle antreibt und stärkt, uns resilienter, kreativer und menschlicher macht.

In der Lesung wird für ausgewählte Passagen eine begrenzte Menge an Text-to-Speech verwendet, um einen bestimmten kreativen Effekt zu erzielen. Ansonsten wird der Titel von einem Menschen gesprochen.

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Published November 17, 2025

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Gregor Schmalzried

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Profile Image for Mark Kwesi.
109 reviews58 followers
November 25, 2025
In this hands-on book, German AI journalist and podcast host Gregor Schmalzried drags AI off the sci-fi pedestal and plants it back into our human hands. And he can, because he’s earned the authority: after years researching and explaining AI, he brings thoughtful and hands-on experience to every example he cites.

The optimism here is field-tested. AI is revolutionary and extremely powerful – but it's still: a human-made technology. The real plot twist, Schmalzried argues, is us: We’re the ones who need to start asking better questions, start experimenting and using AI to become sharper versions of ourselves. We summoned the Terminator four decades ago; now we have to grow into the responsibility those fantasies implied.

Unlike other recent AI books – Nexus' dystopia, If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies' existential dread – Schmalzried doesn’t leave you losing faith in humanity. His focus stays relentlessly human. He’s clear about the cultural chaos ahead: a “Market for Lemons” where real and fake blur, a creator economy where everyone can make everything so that story and context matter even more. And because Schmalzried has spent years translating AI for a broad public, the book is very accessible – perfect for beginners, intermediates, and anyone who wants to understand not just what AI is, but what we can do with it.

In the end, the book gives you the one thing most AI books forget: hope. It makes you want to go out there, roll up your sleeves, and actually do things with AI.
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