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Controlling AI is the great challenge of our age

The genie is only half out of the bottle, says Richard Susskind, but we should be in a state of high alert – and anyone who thinks otherwise is ‘plain daft’

22 March 2025

9:00 AM

22 March 2025

9:00 AM

How to Think About AI: A Guide for the Perplexed Richard Susskind

OUP, pp.224, 10.99

In 1997 the world chess champion Garry Kasparov was beaten by an IBM computer system called Deep Blue. It had defied all expectations, exploring some 300 million possible moves in one second. The most that skilled chess players can contemplate is about 110 moves at any given time.

It was a seminal moment in the advance of artificial intelligence – even if not fully understood, writes Richard Susskind in How to Think About AI.

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