 So, alien technology, humanity has created, starting from fire is a double-edged soul. So it can bring improvements to life, to work, and to society, but it can bring the perils. And AI has the perils. You know, I wake up every day worried about the diversity inclusion issue in AI. We worry about fairness, or the lack of fairness, privacy, the labor market. So absolutely we need to be concerned and because of that we need to expand the study, the research, and the development of policies and the dialogue of AI beyond just the codes and the products into these human realms, into these societal issues. So I absolutely agree with you on that, that this is the moment to open the dialogue, to open the research in those issues. Okay. Even though I would just say that, again, part of my fear is the dialogue. I don't fear AI experts talking with philosophers. I'm fine with that. Historians, good. Literary critics, wonderful. I fear the moment you start talking with biologists. That's my biggest fear. When you and the biologist really, hey, we actually have a common language and we can do things together and that's when the really scary things I think will begin. Can you elaborate on what is scary in you, that we talk to biologists? That's the moment when you can really hack human beings, not by collecting data about our search words or our purchasing habits or where do we go about town, but you can actually start peering inside and collect data directly from our hearts and from our brains. Okay. Can I be specific? First of all, the birth of AI is AI scientists talking to biologists, specifically neuroscientists. The birth of AI is very much inspired by what the brain does. Fast forward to 60 years later, today's AI is making great improvement in healthcare. There's a lot of data from our physiology and pathology being collected and using machine learning to help us, but I feel like you're talking about something else. That's part of it. I mean, if there wasn't a great promise in the technology, there would also be no danger because nobody would go along that path. And obviously, there are enormously beneficial things that AI can do for us, especially when it is linked with our biology. We are about to get the best healthcare in the world, in history. And the cheapest and available for billions of people via their smartphones, which today they have almost nothing. And this is why it is almost impossible to resist the temptation. And with all the issue of privacy, if you have a big battle between privacy and health, health is likely to win hands down. So I fully agree with that. And my job as a historian, as a philosopher, as a social critic is to point out the dangers in that. Because especially in Silicon Valley, people are very much familiar with the advantages, but they don't like to think so much about the dangers.