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The Human Voice with Bob Hutchins

Podcast by Bob Hutchins

English

Technology & science

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About The Human Voice with Bob Hutchins

Bob Hutchins- Digital Marketing OG, Cultural and media theorist, and Organizational Psychologist talks about all things human and restorative. Tech, Psychology, Spirituality, Change, Mental and Social Well Being.

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135 episodes

episode The Funny Thing about Intelligence and Power artwork

The Funny Thing about Intelligence and Power

The Funny Thing about Intelligence and Power We have spent centuries treating cognitive ability as a sacrament, using it to justify hierarchies and decide who deserves a seat at the table. But as intelligence becomes a commodity, the foundations of that power are shifting. This episode explores what happens when we stop performing expertise and start prioritizing presence. Key Reflections The End of the Intelligence Cult: For generations, we used degrees and abstract thought as measures of human merit. If a machine can now synthesize information better than we can, the scarcity that fueled our professional hierarchies is evaporating. From Expertise to Presence: When you no longer have to be the smartest person in the room, you are free to be the most present. AI may replicate logic, but it cannot replicate the act of seeing another person as entirely human. The Role of the Modern Leader: Leadership is moving away from protecting proprietary knowledge and toward creating environments for collective thinking. The value lies in mentorship and empathy—skills that were never "consolation prizes" for a lower IQ, but the very things that advance the world. A Liberating Humility: Admitting that our systems were often unfair is difficult, but it is also a relief. We can finally stop protecting our turf and start developing relationships. Notable Quotes "When you cease hoarding information, you can begin to share understanding." "Empathy isn't a substitute plan if your IQ is no longer valuable. Empathy is what should have been valuable all along." "You don't have to pretend anymore. You don't have to perform genius. You can simply be a human: flawed, relational, present." My Substack article that his originated from https://bobhutchins.substack.com/p/the-funny-thing-about-intelligence

15 Feb 2026 - 11 min
episode Dr. Stephanie Bennett- Silence, Civility, and Sanity artwork

Dr. Stephanie Bennett- Silence, Civility, and Sanity

Dr. Stephanie Bennett is a professor of communication and media ecology at Palm Beach Atlantic University. For over two decades, she has explored the "invisible architecture" of our digital lives. A fellow traveler in the tradition of Neil Postman, Dr. Bennett's work examines how our technological environment shapes the soul. She is the author of several books, including Silence, Civility, and Sanity: Hope for Humanity in a Digital Age and her newest release, Relationships on the Run. Key Discussion Points Dr. Bennett discusses why we often flee from silence. In a culture that values infinite optimization, five seconds of quiet can feel "deathly." We fill every corner of our lives with noise—even "beautiful noise"—to avoid confronting our own interiority and the uncertainty of the soul. A reflection on the modern "reflex" to pull out a smartphone while waiting in line. This habit eliminates "weak ties"—those small, humanizing interactions with strangers that ground us in the human race. Phantom Silence is a term Dr. Bennett uses to describe the digital bubbles we create (like noise-canceling earbuds) that appear quiet but are actually filled with mental chatter and a constant "fire hose" of information. The dialectic of speech and silence suggests that meaningful speech must rise from a "bed of silence." Dr. Bennett explains that without a contemplative or reflective space, our communication becomes a knee-jerk reaction rather than a thoughtful response. While acknowledging the benefits of emerging tech like AI, the conversation touches on the danger of "subcontracting our thinking." We must move toward a "third way" that uses technology as a tool for human flourishing without amputating our essential human functions. As the director of the Word-ship initiative, Dr. Bennett works to foster "curiosity over conviction," helping students engage in difficult conversations about politics, religion, and grief with respect and dignity. Reflection Questions "What do we have to bring to our friendships, our spouses, or our children if we are void and empty—an echoing cavern in our soul?" When was the last time you stood in a line or sat in an elevator without reaching for your phone? Do you respond to others with "knee-jerk reactions," or do you allow a moment of silence to prepare a thoughtful response? Which areas of your life have you "subcontracted" to a digital tool, and what human ability might be atrophying as a result? Resources Mentioned Book: Silence, Civility, and Sanity: Hope for Humanity in a Digital Age New Release: Relationships on the Run: How to Grow Authentic Connections and Lasting Intimacy in a World on the Run Initiative: Word-ship at Palm Beach Atlantic University [https://www.pba.edu] Influences: Neil Postman, Max Picard (The World of Silence), and Jaron Lanier.

10 Feb 2026 - 40 min
episode The Water We Swim In: When Technology Becomes Environment artwork

The Water We Swim In: When Technology Becomes Environment

Episode Summary: In this episode, we move beyond the common debate of whether technology is "good" or "bad" to explore a more fundamental reality: technology is no longer just a tool we pick up; it is the environment we inhabit. Drawing on the prophetic work of French sociologist Jacques Ellul, Bob explores how we have migrated from a natural wilderness defined by seasons and storms to a "silicon wilderness" defined by algorithms and efficiency. We look at the anxiety of the disconnected screen, the illusion of being a "user," and why the human soul-which thrives on inefficiency and imperfection-truggles to breathe in a system designed for zero error. If we build the house, and the house eventually builds us, what kind of humans are we becoming inside this machine? And where do we find the "glitch" that proves we are still alive? Notable Quotes: "You can put down a hammer. You cannot put down the weather." "We do not navigate by the stars anymore. We navigate by the blue light of the screen." "The machine forces us to develop a mechanism of perfection. The soul thrives on the glitch." Mentioned in this Episode: Jacques Ellul (1912–1994): French philosopher, sociologist, and lay theologian. The Human Voice on Substack [https://bobhutchins.substack.com/]

9 Jan 2026 - 13 min
episode Baratunde Thurston on Life With Machines, Language as Culture, and Staying Human in a Tech-Driven World artwork

Baratunde Thurston on Life With Machines, Language as Culture, and Staying Human in a Tech-Driven World

In this episode of The Human Voice, Bob Hutchins sits down with Baratunde Thurston—Emmy-nominated host, writer, comedian, and creator of the podcast Life With Machines. From his roots in Washington, D.C., shaped by a mother who was a computer programmer and activist, through Harvard philosophy and a decade of stand-up, Baratunde has built a career at the intersection of culture, technology, and storytelling. Their conversation ranges from the everyday signals of progress—like coffee shop Wi-Fi and subway calls—to deeper questions about authorship, language, and governance in the age of AI. They explore what it means to share creative space with an AI collaborator, why indigenous languages reveal new possibilities for machine learning, and how democracy might draw wisdom from traditions that put nature and future generations at the center. Baratunde also shares the simple practices that keep him grounded: meditation, meals with people, moving his body, and spending time in the natural world. Together they sketch a vision where technology doesn't replace our humanity but presses us to return to it with more intention. Themes Infrastructure is culture. Machines can help us think, but they can't carry grief. Language encodes imagination and culture. Governance should begin with shared values, not with chasing releases. Embodiment is non-negotiable for a human life. Where to find Baratunde Life With Machines on YouTube [https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNAIqAFlQakRbUBni--jxoSkoyoG8srXY&si=WPI2_mcaAjQykOnV] and podcast platforms Website - https://www.baratunde.com/

22 Sep 2025 - 1 h 4 min
episode When Machines Imitate Art: What a 1930s Philosopher Saw Coming artwork

When Machines Imitate Art: What a 1930s Philosopher Saw Coming

In this episode, I step back from the hype and headlines around generative AI to reflect on something deeper: what's actually happening to our experience of art, creativity, and meaning when machines start making things that feel human. I draw from the work of 1930s philosopher Walter Benjamin—who never saw a chatbot or image model in his life, but somehow understood the psychological and cultural impact of machine-made creativity with stunning clarity. * What's lost when everything becomes a copy * Why "aura" and authenticity still matter * The shift from ritual to exhibition in creative work * What the Jason Allen AI art controversy reveals about our values * How new forms of creative labor are emerging—and what that means for writers, artists, educators, and makers * Why transparency might matter more than purity in a world of machine collaboration This isn't a takedown or a celebration of AI. It's a reflection. A pause. A reminder that we're not just building tools—we're reshaping what it means to be human. If you're a teacher, a marketer, a business leader, a parent, or just someone trying to stay grounded in a rapidly changing world—this one's for you. Resources Mentioned: * Walter Benjamin, The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction * The 2022 Colorado State Fair AI art controversy * Stephen Marche's AI-assisted novella Death of an Author * Artwork- James Allen's - Théâtre D'opéra Spatial Stay Connected: Want more thoughtful takes like this? Subscribe to the Substack → https://bobhutchins.substack.com Or find me on LinkedIn → linkedin.com/in/bobhutchins [https://www.linkedin.com/in/bobhutchins/] Let's keep asking better questions. —Bob Hutchins

9 Jul 2025 - 22 min
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