 One of the things you discussed is this notion of amputation. So as technology gives us a capability, we then amputate the capability we used to have. You know, we've lost that ability like local knowledge to me seems to be something that we are losing. What do we need to make sure that we're not amputating? Because having GPS is wonderful, but if I don't have that, I still need to know how to navigate. And that skill of actually knowing how to use a map, is that okay to lose? Well, I think there's some things that are okay to lose and other ones are not. For example, if we were to never drive a car again, Germans would say that's terrible, right? But everybody else would say, hey, you know, well, it's kind of fun to drive a car sometimes. But if we lose that, not a big deal. But to give up giving birth, for example, in which people are proposing that we can have children outside in an artificial womb, that's not a joke. I mean, you shudder as a woman to think about that, right? But people are proposing that. That is a ludicrous idea. So basically we have to say, what makes us human? And driving a car does not make us human. But finding our way, I think that some of that we should retain, and then there's actually a job called the be wilder, which makes people wild again. So you go into the forest and you figure out how to tap back into those things that you still have. But what bothers me most there is that we may be the last generation of people that actually knows what offline actually means. True. That's an interesting concept. You know, 15 year old kids are always online. And so I think that we have to go back and make a conscious effort of saying, you know, you should know how to speak to a person. You should have those skills. You should be able to write, for example, there's also people saying, yeah, why do our kids learn how to hand write? Because they can speak to computer, right? I mean, every psychologist knows that if you don't learn how to write, you're going to not turn out so well. You're going to not express yourself, right? Well, that has other side effects, right? So we have to define what those things are and what we want to drop, what we not want to drop. And now technology is coming to us and saying, well, let's transcend humanity. Leave all that baggage behind so we can live forever and be superhuman. And to which I would say that's probably not superhuman. That's probably a downgrade, not an upgrade.