Adam Zewe | MIT News Office
April 3, 2022
What does it mean to be human in an age where artificial intelligence agents make decisions that shape human actions? That’s a deep question with no easy answers, and it’s been on the mind of Dan Huttenlocher SM ’84, PhD ’88, dean of the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing, for the past few years.
“Advances in AI are going to happen, but the destination that we get to with those advances is up to us, and it is far from certain,” says Huttenlocher, who is also the Henry Ellis Warren Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science.
Along with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and elder statesman Henry Kissinger, Huttenlocher recently explored some of the quandaries posed by the rise of AI, in the book, “The Age of AI: And Our Human Future.” For Huttenlocher and his co-authors, “Our belief is that, to get there, we need much more informed dialogue and much more multilateral dialogue. Our hope is that the book will get people interested in doing that from a broad range of places,” he says.
Complete article from MIT News.
Explore
Discovering the Joy of Future-forward Electrical Engineering
Jane Halpern | Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
One year in, MIT’s hands-on 6-5 (Electrical Engineering With Computing) degree program is already one of the most popular majors among first-year students.
Tomás Palacios appointed Director of ISN
Office of the Vice President for Research
As director, Tomás will lead ISN’s research mission and build communities within MIT and with external partners.
Lisa Su ’90, SM ’91, PhD ’94 to deliver MIT’s 2026 Commencement address
Kathy Wren | MIT News
An electrical engineer by training, Su is the chair and CEO of the semiconductor company AMD.




