The term “Artificial Intelligence” has gained wide currency in today’s world. From the regular classrooms, and daily human discussions to high-level meetings and even political speeches, it has increasingly appeared in numbers of conversations. Yet it is often used with little or no philosophical scrutiny. Ours is an era in which a technocratic mindset - concerned only with what is produced and consumed - threatens to overshadow the sapiential mindset, which asks the deeper question of why human beings produce and co

The term “Artificial Intelligence” has gained wide currency in today’s world. From the regular classrooms, and daily human discussions to high-level meetings and even political speeches, it has increasingly appeared in numbers of conversations. Yet it is often used with little or no philosophical scrutiny. Ours is an era in which a technocratic mindset - concerned only with what is produced and consumed - threatens to overshadow the sapiential mindset, which asks the deeper question of why human beings produce and co