TheScribeatWork Type post Author George Montañez Date February 26, 2026 CategoriesComputational SciencesHuman ExceptionalismTechnology Tagged , AI agents, automaton, capability widgets, computer, desire, digital media, displacement, disruption, economics, expertise, generative AI systems, goal-setting, Hidden Figures, human computer, humans, information technology, Johannes Gutenberg, journalism, knowledge, labor, literacy, machines, manual labor, manufacturing, mass media, publishing, replacement, science, scribes, tech economy, technology, widgets, work Will Humans Still Matter in an AI Economy? George Montañez February 26, 2026 Computational Sciences, Human Exceptionalism, Technology 7 Before Johannes Gutenberg’s invention, scribes painstakingly copied manuscripts by hand. Read More ›
Smokingpipesitter Type post Author George Montañez Date February 25, 2026 CategoriesComputational SciencesHuman Exceptionalism Tagged , animals, arithmetic, artificial inteligence, attention, bigram model, Claude, Claude Shannon, coherence, comprehension, computer code, conversations, Data Processing Inequality, disinformation, embedding, English, fish, food, functional capability, games, generative AI systems, GPT-5, humans, incompleteness theorem, information theory, Kurt Gödel, large language models, mathematical reasoning, model collapse, music, numbers, pixels, poetry, processing, prompts, reasoning, René Magritte, semantics, statistical patterns, syntax, The Treachery of Images, tokens, vectors, video, William Shakespeare, word approximation, words Why AI Can’t Replace Us Functionally George Montañez February 25, 2026 Computational Sciences, Human Exceptionalism 9 The map is not the territory. The symbol is not the thing. And the model is not the mind. Read More ›