Walk and Talk with Mark Allardyce

Losing Skills

5 min · 17 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Losing Skills

Descripción

We are teaching machines to think. At the same time, many humans are slowly losing the very skills that helped our species survive. Instinct. Judgement. Bonding. Caring. The ability to act under pressure without certainty. The ability to protect each other when life becomes uncertain. I’ve been thinking deeply about what humanity may be losing in an increasingly screen-saturated world… and why those lost skills may become the most valuable things we possess. This piece explores why families, nature and real-world experience may matter more in the age of AI than ever before.

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Five Billion Ticks

Five billion ticks ago, a mechanical clock began marking time inside a cathedral. No electricity. No code. Just gears, gravity and patience. In that same building, on a piece of goat skin written by hand in 1215, something else began ticking. It was written to shape power before it grew beyond those it affected. The concern was simple. A king. Authority without restraint. So they wrote limits into power. They did not reject authority. They defined it. Civilisation changes. The instinct does not. Eight hundred years later, we are still refining that effort. Now we stand before a different kind of power. Not a king, but something far more scalable. It lives in algorithms, in optimisation systems, in machines capable of making decisions at a speed and reach no monarch ever possessed. Five billion ticks ago, a clock began marking time over a document that restrained power. Five billion ticks from now… where will we be? 🎧 A short 3-minute reflection.

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