The Dr. Robert E Marx Show
On the latest episode of the Dr. Robert E. Marx Show, Dr. Marx responds to a wave of college commencement speeches fixated on artificial intelligence, and argues that too many speakers squandered a chance to inspire graduates by leaning into fear instead. AI, he insists, should be seen as a powerful tool rather than a threat, and the graduates of today are far better positioned than the anxious headlines suggest. He opens by reflecting on what a graduation speech should actually do: inform, inspire, encourage, and help young people picture their own success. Drawing on his own experience addressing medical students, residents, and surgical graduates, he boils his message down to a single line he wishes more speakers had delivered: accept AI, use AI, don't let AI use you. Resistance, he argues, is pointless because AI is now permanently woven into society and will only expand. With countries like China, Russia, and North Korea aggressively pursuing AI capabilities, technological leadership has become a strategic priority. The smart move for graduates is not to fight the technology but to learn to leverage it, always remembering that it remains a tool, not a replacement for human beings. The heart of the episode is Dr. Marx's case for what humans still do better. Imagination tops the list. He points to innovators like Thomas Edison, Harvey Firestone, Wernher von Braun, and Elon Musk, visionaries who conjured entirely new possibilities rather than rearranging existing data. AI can process what already exists, he says, but it does not dream up the genuinely new the way people do. He also champions interpretation, describing AI as a massive repository holding both accurate and inaccurate information, which leaves humans with the crucial job of weighing evidence, judging credibility, and separating truth from error. Critical thinking rounds out his trio: people can question assumptions, challenge accepted ideas, and think beyond the boundaries of any program. He then walks through how AI will reshape specific professions without erasing them. In law, AI will speed up research and document review dramatically, but lawyers still read juries, evaluate witnesses, and sense courtroom dynamics in ways machines cannot. In medicine, his own field, he sees real promise in record analysis, diagnostics, and surgical planning, yet insists human judgment is irreplaceable when anatomy is unusual, complications arise mid-surgery, or patients leave out key details from their histories. Sports, he argues, will stay fundamentally human because fans connect with personalities, charisma, and stories, not just performance. And religion and philosophy, with their questions about God and life after death, ultimately demand personal interpretation that AI can summarize but never settle. Dr. Marx places all of this in historical perspective. Slide rules gave way to calculators, typewriters to computers, paper maps to GPS, Palm Pilots to smartphones, traditional dentures to dental implants. Every generation feared its disruptive technology, and every generation adapted. That, he says, is humanity's real superpower: adaptability. AI can be programmed, but people can keep learning and evolving across an entire lifetime. Neil Haley offers a grounding counterpoint. He agrees AI won't eliminate all jobs, but expects it to shrink many teams, trimming administrative, research-heavy, and entry-level roles across law, medicine, accounting, marketing, and sports scouting. At the same time, he sees new careers emerging, especially AI management, where organizations will need people who understand AI systems, automation workflows, and data oversight. Dr. Marx agrees that managing AI will become an important path forward. Both men land on the same conclusion: the era of the easy, repetitive desk job is ending, and future success depends on constant learning and expanding skills. As Dr. Marx puts it, graduation is not the end of education but the beginning.
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