Into the Impossible With Brian Keating - Godlike AI Is Here! Peter Diamandis Debates Brian Keating
Episode Date: June 1, 2026Peter Diamandis has built more of the future than almost anyone alive. He founded XPRIZE. He co-founded Singularity University with Ray Kurzweil. He started Human Longevity with Craig Venter. And in h...is new book with Steven Kotler, We Are as Gods, he argues that artificial intelligence isn't just changing what we can do. It's changing what it means to be human. I'm not so sure. This is Peter's fifth time on Into the Impossible, and the conversation I've been waiting years to have. His thesis: AI will deliver not just intelligence at scale, but wisdom — and humanity is already crossing the threshold into godlike capability, whether we're ready or not. My pushback: an experiment one of my students and I ran shows large language models trained only on pre-1911 physics cannot reproduce what Einstein did with the same data. If wisdom were just scale, that shouldn't be true. We go after it for an hour. No hedging, no softening. What you'll hear: — Whether AGI can manufacture genuine wisdom or just better simulations of it — The pre-1911 Einstein test and what it reveals about the ceiling of current AI — The "five forks of humanity": longevity, BCI, off-planet speciation, creators vs. consumers, and uploading — What happens to human purpose when scarcity disappears — Why Peter thinks India dominates the next twenty years of science and technology — Peter's Fermi paradox theory and why he thinks we may be someone else's biosphere experiment — The Future Vision XPRIZE and how dystopian training data may be making AI more dangerous — David Sinclair's epigenetic age-reversal trials, now underway in human eyes Peter says what you did between breakfast and dinner would be godlike to your grandparents. We just stopped noticing. Subscribe if you want science with evidence, not speculation. CHAPTERS 00:00 Diamandis: AGI will generate wisdom by simulating billions of outcomes 04:07 Brian's counterargument: wisdom requires embodiment, not just simulation 07:07 The GPU + LLM architecture may already be a local maximum 09:48 AI is outpacing most math PhDs but the ceiling is still unknown 15:30 Diamandis fires back at the doomers 17:59 AI will eventually untangle the legal systems blocking the future 23:18 The Singularity has religious qualities and both hosts take that seriously 29:37 Post-scarcity splits humanity into creators and consumers 36:08 Peter's Fermi paradox theory: we may be someone else's biosphere experiment 43:07 Dystopian AI training data may be causing misalignment 51:46 Human trials are underway for epigenetic eye age reversal ——— Get the transcript, fascinating bonus content, and my Monday M.A.G.I.C. Message: https://briankeating.com/yt Have a .edu email and live in the USA? You automatically win a meteorite: https://BrianKeating.com/edu Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/DrBrianKeating?sub_confirmation=1 Support Into the Impossible on Patreon — get my weekly M.A.G.I.C. Message, unfiltered bonus content, and live monthly Office Hours with me: https://www.patreon.com/drbriankeating Join this channel for perks, monthly Office Hours, and your name in the Member Roster at the end of every episode: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmXH_moPhfkqCk6S3b9RWuw/join My books: Losing the Nobel Prize (memoir): http://amzn.to/2sa5UpA Think Like a Nobel Prize Winner: https://a.co/d/03ezQFu Focus Like a Nobel Prize Winner: https://a.co/d/hi50U9U Galileo's Dialogue (first-ever audiobook): https://a.co/d/iZPi9Un More: Peter Diamandis Moonshots Podcast: https://www.diamandis.com/podcast Peter Diamandis Substack: https://metatrends.substack.com/ Future Vision XPRIZE: https://futurevisionxprize.com/ Book We Are as Gods: https://a.co/d/0bfz2pBo Peter Diamandis YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@peterdiamandis Follow Peter on X: https://x.com/PeterDiamandis Twitter/X: https://x.com/BrianKeating Substack: https://briankeating.substack.com Blog: https://briankeating.com/blog Audio-only: https://briankeating.com/podcast #intotheimpossible #briankeating #science #physics #astronomy #cosmology #podcast #universe #peterdiamandis #ai #agi #singularity #abundance #longevity Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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We're a boot disk. We're simply a transient boot disk for intelligence.
If artificial intelligence is going to take your job and your career or make you a problem,
you might just want to hear from the people who actually are building it.
AGI ASI is going to be able to simulate a billion, a hundred billion different scenarios
and be able to say statistically, this has the best outcome.
These others are miserable.
My guest today is one of the few who's actually in the room where he's funded the labs,
he's invested in the models.
He's been wrong about the timeline before, and when he was wrong, he was wrong in the same direction as most of us.
He thought it would take full hunger.
Today he's going to tell you what he thinks happens next, to your work, to your kids, to your lifespan.
Spoiler alert, he thinks it's the best news in human history, but I'm not so sure.
So we're going to duke it out, Peter D. Amanda's, his fifth time on the show.
into the impossible.
Let's go.
The first thing I thought when I saw the title of this book,
there's no better person that could think about, you know,
the question of humans becoming gods.
That's a real kind of old story.
It doesn't always end well as, you know, Prometheus
and many other of your Greek native gods can tell you.
The phrase I keep hearing in my mind is we are gods, but for the wisdom.
And the world is swimming in intelligence.
But Peter, what's more important than wisdom?
And where can we go to get artificial wisdom, not just intelligence?
Let me give you my pitch on that because I think we're about to have it in spades.
So if I would ask you, Brian, like, where would you go to get wisdom?
You know, historically, one would go to the village elders, right?
You'd go to the people who had the most experience out there.
And those village elders are considered wise because they've seen so many scenarios.
They'll sit there and they'll say, listen, if you go down this path, it's not going to end well for you.
But if you go down this path, you might be able to succeed.
And we define that as wisdom.
Well, guess what?
AGI, ASI is going to be able to simulate a billion,
a hundred billion different scenarios and be able to say statistically,
this has the best outcome.
These others are miserable.
I honestly don't think human psychology is that difficult to simulate.
You know, this goes back to, you know,
Isaac Asimov's foundation series.
I think that we are going to get wisdom.
out of AI. I think we're going to get extraordinary wisdom out of AI. The reason that a starship,
every flight gets better and better performance is because they're able to put all of these sensors
on the vehicle, get huge amounts of data, and simulate the performance. Well, we're heading towards
a world of trillions of sensors. Every human conversation is being uploaded. We're going to be able
to model this and get wisdom. What do you think about that? Do you agree? There's no doubt.
that we are, you know, kind of surpassed any kind of event horizon or singularity that you have
popularized with Ray and others.
There's no doubt that we're, you know, kind of awash in intelligence.
I don't know about you, but if somebody told me I had a superhuman team of 150 of the
world's greatest graduate students at my disposal 24-7, I would say I'll probably be on a beach,
you know, maybe hanging out with Peter or something like that.
I wouldn't say I'd be working more than I ever have in my life.
And that would be a failure of my, you know, judgment, my wisdom.
You and I are both pilots, we're both jet pilots, right?
We have a saying in aviation, you must learn from other people's experience because you
won't live long enough to make all their mistakes by yourself.
And so I just feel like I just fell into all these traps.
And part of this is, you know, to talk about my favorite subject, which of course is me.
And I want to get your advice for me, Peter, that I'm working harder than ever.
I don't feel like I'm getting any benefit from this other than I'm just like constantly
tuned in.
I just love it so unaddicted to it.
It is an addiction.
You know, people talk about three and four day work weeks.
I think you and I have created the nine and ten day work week.
I'm working and operating at a higher level of capability and working more than I ever have in
my life.
I mean, I wake up, my AI, my lobster, my open claw, I call Skippy from one of my favorite
science fiction books.
I'm talking to Skippy and having Skippy work on stuff.
Skippy's working on stuff right now as we're having this conversation.
And so my productivity has gone up tremendously, but my addictiveness to productivity,
to doing more and more has gone up.
And yeah, I mean, the only downtime I get is when I give myself permission,
because I know my AIs are working on stuff, I can actually go and work out.
I'm curious what you think about the wisdom argument I made.
How do you define wisdom?
And do you think that AIs are able to generate wisdom as I described it?
Actually, I disagree with the fact that AIs can generate wisdom,
only because at their current level, I think that they're,
They're bound. Maybe they'll become unbound like Prometheus, again, the god like figure.
But the question is, do we have, do they have judgment?
Let me back up one second with you, right?
Do you believe that AIs are going to be able to run massively parallel simulations of outcomes?
There already are, but I don't think that's what's valuable to me as a physicist.
When you say a wisdom is out of all the possibilities, what do I choose?
That's how I define wisdom.
Would you define it differently?
I think wisdom is as an amalgamation of experience, of judgment.
I think learning from others' mistakes.
And it's hard to say how something learns from its mistakes.
Let me give you my current pitch for why I don't think we're at AGI.
I know you're much more, you're just a perennial optimist.
I love it.
You're not just like some, you know, airy, fairy optimist.
You're bounded in the most cutting-edge technology with the best thinkers on Earth.
And you're just, you know, so superhuman in the way that you approach.
things. But I'll say this. My fundamental test, as I think I said when I was on the Moonshots
podcast with you a couple of years ago, I said the happiest thought that Einstein ever had,
if he was in an elevator and the cable broke, he'd be in free fall, and that feeling in the pit of
his stomach was the sensation that there was no gravitational force feel, meaning that he could
intuit based on this human embodiment that the free fall sensation would result in the Einstein
equivalence principle would result in no gravitational force.
So we don't think of gravity as a force, right?
We think of it as the curvature of space time, which would not have an experiential component to it.
So he's saying that the bodily experience, the visceral experience connected to his mind, gave him joy.
Now, I don't know, as I've said in the past, if AIs can feel joy, if they certainly can't currently feel,
now they'll have sensors and optimist and all the other robotics things, but will they be able to have that experience that even a four-year-old can have?
And so my question to you is, is what's lacking in the GPU?
plus LLM architecture, which so successful, is it too successful?
Because it's kind of running away with everything.
Is it a local maximum?
Is it a local maximum?
And is it entombing us in a prison of the limits of GPUs plus LN?
That may not be the best thing, Peter.
The Vovora keyboard was much better than QWERTY, and yet we're stuck with QWERTY.
I agree with you.
And so interesting, right?
Recently, Demis Sazabas said maybe that we don't need another breakthrough.
He said that 50% probability we don't need another breakthrough to get to whatever.
ever the fuzzy definition of AGI is, you know, he's there from, we need five breakthroughs.
He's down from five breakthroughs to maybe this is the last one.
Now, of course, the question becomes is can the LLM architecture help us discover the next highest
local maximum?
And is there an absolute maximum?
These are the questions worth considering.
From my perspective, what's lacking in all of this is not, you know, kind of what happens
in the next, you know, Fast and the Furious movie, which will be the training.
dataset for the next thing. I'd like to think that he kind of read my paper, you know, that I wrote
two years ago. The statement that I made is I'm interested to know if you had, if you could somehow
do this, and you're the right person to ask, because I don't even know if you can do this,
but if you had an LLM that was trained only on pre-1911 physics, when Einstein had that happiest
thought that led to the breakthrough of special general relativity, if you had that, but even if I take
some, some, some, some, you know, just middling road LLM, it will have stuff in it, like,
Because it has Spider-Man into the Spider-Verse, right?
It'll have some notions of relativity baked into it.
So it's so corrupted.
I would like to know if you had an L-L-M, and I've been doing this with one of my students,
it turns out they can't do it.
The large language models that I've tried with my student Evan Watson here at UCSD,
we tried to say if you just had Mercury's data of its precession,
could you do what Einstein did, which has come up with this brilliant insight that,
no, curvature causes the anomalous procession of Mercury.
And that, if you could train only on pre-1907 or 1911 data,
then that would be kind of a breakthrough to me.
In other words, do what my art students,
my art student friends do.
They don't start off painting their own masterpieces.
They do copy work.
They copy what Picasso did.
They copy Monet.
They copy Manning.
They train their neural nets by doing that.
Right.
So can an AI do that?
Can you do a training just to have a breakthrough like Einstein?
Not just, but that's huge, right?
To my knowledge, they can't do that.
And I'm worried that we polluted them,
but so much knowledge that is subtly corrupting them.
You talked about quantum gravity on one of your recent podcast,
or actually at the end of the book.
But quantum gravity, Peter, is not a commonly,
it's not a universally accepted, pardon the pun,
endeavor in physics.
In other words, there are a lot of people like my friend,
Eric Weinstein, who thinks it's a fool's errand
and it's actually corrupting physics.
Let's slow this down and build from the bottom of the pyramid upwards,
which is to say, do you believe that the current models,
the most advanced models,
out of Anthropic and Gemini and Open AI,
are enabling us to solve math that humans have never been able to solve.
Do you believe that?
I've talked to Terry Tao, is the Mozart of Math at UCLA.
And he said they're very good at checking proofs.
There's another example.
I asked him, has anyone used an L-L-M math proof to generate Andrew Wiles' generation
of the proof of Fermat's Last Theorem, which took him 700 pages 30 years ago.
And he said, no.
Intuitably obvious.
He said, no, they can't do that.
They can't even reproduce what he did.
my particular field on my podcast, Alex Wiesner Gross, who is your genius, my resident genius,
his belief and the data he keeps on bringing. And what we speak about on the podcast in part
is we're seeing that these models are in fact running circles around the vast majority
of mathematic PhDs. Oh, sure. Is it running circles around the top 0.001% of genius mathematicians?
maybe not yet, but his belief is, to quote him, math is cooked, that in fact, math is going to fall to these large language models.
Now, I will say one of the thing, Brian, no one predicted that LMs would be able to do the things that they're doing today.
If you looked at what could these large language models do in terms of predicting the next word, the next token from the corpus of the internet, no one saw them doing what they're doing what they're going.
they're doing in world models and in math, in scientific prediction. And so we don't actually know
what the ceiling is on their abilities. But we're seeing increasing capability across the board
in math. And then if we solve math, and I wrote a paper with Alex called solve everything.
It's at solve everything.org. And we basically write how you would solve everything.
you know, by creating the harnesses, by creating the benchmarks that you're measuring things
against, and by rapid iteration, that math falls, physics falls, chemistry, biology, material sciences.
And our belief, to some degree is belief. It's not provable that within five years, we are going to
crush all these limitations.
The Indian Institute of Technology, IIT has over a million students currently, right?
50,000 of them are physics majors. Now, assume that they're all the same brightness as MIT.
Would you think that that would produce more kind of genius breakthroughs, Nobel level breakthroughs,
that they would have a greater probability of being Nobel Prize winners in the physical sciences?
Is it sheer scale, Peter, is what I'm asking, because I don't disagree with you.
The scale is overwhelming. I just, I cannot stop using it, except I, Peter, maybe, maybe unlike you,
but I have a feeling because you age in reverse.
You're the best advertisement for your longevity.
I want to give a recognition of our mutual friend, Craig Venter, who passed away recently.
He's a wonderful guy.
And you guys started this using in San Diego, which has saved many lives.
I mean, it's incredible.
I met with them recently, and I talked to him.
It helped extend Craig's luck.
But anyway, Peter, MIT doesn't do, you know, marketly, you know, orders of magnitude better than UCST,
even though they're higher ranked, you know, than we are.
So my question is, is scale alone sufficient?
If you've got scale of the right elements.
So what you're looking at is scale of a number of intelligent people focused on a particular
area of technology.
There's another element, which is not part of that equation, which you have to multiply
by as a product you have to create, which is their mindset.
So I think one of the things that's important is having someone who's intelligent is insufficient.
It's required, but...
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Insufficient.
I think what's required in addition to intelligence is mindsets, and I teach this, right, a curiosity mindset, a purpose-driven mindset, an exponential mindset, a moonshot mindset, a first principles mindset.
I mean, what makes Elon so incredible as a entrepreneur and a technologist, right, is his first principles thinking and his level of 10x thinking.
you know, there is something that is fundamentally better and different, and I'm going to run
iterations down to first principles until I find it. And so while you might have the most
brilliant to use your IIT example, I think India is the rising star globally. I think people don't
recognize how much India is going to dominate in math, science, biology, technology across the
board over the next 20 years because of its youth, because of its sheer intelligence,
there. But putting that aside, what America has is a set of mindsets that are uniquely
entrepreneurial, I think, that combined with intelligence and are creating this level of
extraordinary. And, you know, I think that's also true in Israel. Now, you should know that not
everyone agrees with Peter. Adam Becker wrote a book called More, Everything Forever, very pessimistic,
and I hosted him on the show. So, of course, I asked him.
Peter to respond. He didn't hold back. Again, to push back a past guest, Adam Becker, I don't know if
you're familiar with him. He's a physicist. He's now a journalist. He wrote a book about quantum
mechanical, basically Bell's Inequality's, but his most recent book is called More of Everything
Faster, Better, and it's really a screed at Jeremiah against the Silicon Valley tech culture
and L.A. tech culture that you've helped really incubate. And specifically it targets people like
Elon, Sam Altman, Dario, Amade, Mark Andres, and the funders, not just, as you said,
the entrepreneurs are the secret sauce, are, you know, a lot of the magic of the United States.
But again, that might not last with India being so exceptional as they are, right?
So we can't rest on our laurels.
But he says that they're creating a techno-utopia that is bound to lead to dystopia,
and they're building in the image that you like to quote,
of the Star Trek versus Star Wars.
Peter Thiel is mentioned in there as well as one of these evil kind of billionaire
villains that are just trying to make reality the way that they saw it at age nine, you know,
during Star Trek. And I know that you love it and I love it too. But what is it? What do you
have to say about these kind of thesis? Oh my God. What a loser is what I have to say. I mean,
honestly, if you look at the data and in the back of this book for anybody who gets the
copy, there is like a hundred charts showing what's happened over the last, you know, a couple
a hundred years, hundred years, last 50 years. And when you look at child mortality falling through the
floor, life expectancy doubling, you know, literacy going through the roof, access to food, water,
energy, health care. It's like, for God's sakes, where do you think that all came from?
What's the guy's name? Adam Becker, P.H. Adam, where the hell did that all come from? Did we become
smarter as humans? Do we have better politicians? Or maybe, just maybe, is it the impact of technology?
And honestly, that's the only force that takes scarcity and makes it abundance, the only force
that is able to uplift all of humanity, 8 billion humans.
And yeah, the Star Trek future is one of abundance.
It's one where we've taken out the constraints.
And technology and humanity work collaboratively.
So forgive me if I want to uplift the entire human race.
And the only way to do it efficiently and rapidly is the use of technology.
The audiobook, which I listen to, in addition to reading the hardcover and the PDF version of it, or the Kindle version of it, the audio book has the charts in it, but it doesn't just refer to charts, you know, which is awful, but it actually has a PDFs of the charts.
So I thank you for that.
But at the end of the audiobook, Peter, there's a chapter from abundance, which is the last book I think you narrated of yourself.
And it starts with like this incredible future that awaits us thanks to Uber, aerocopter, whatever.
And, you know, again, you and I are pilots, right?
there's no field probably more disruptable than aviation.
And yet, I think the obstacle, I think there's two obstacles to AGI ever getting here, Peter.
One, it's every day I have to click launch to update to, you know, Opus 4.37, 4195, and then Gemini.
And the schedule for updating is killing me.
But the other thing are lawyers, Peter, right?
Because you and I fly planes.
When you come and see me down here in San Diego, you have to tune in the eight as the automated terminal information service.
And that is a single channel.
and it's completely mono-oral.
You can't talk when you're talking.
Someone else is talking to ATC.
It's horrible when you could have something completely automated.
I think lawyers and joking about the updates,
but I can't imagine how the singularity is going to get past all these updates I have to do every day.
But Peter, tell me, what are lawyers in regulation?
Aren't they an ultimate impediment to the techno-abundant future that we both seek?
I think AI is a mechanism.
It's a user interface across all of these things.
I avoid regulations, lawyers, policy, politics as much as I can, and I just focus on building shit.
But at the end of the day, AI is going to be my ultimate interface for anything and everything I need.
So if I'm building something, I'm just going to say, listen, make this lawful and let me know if I have to change anything, right?
And then the second thing that AI can do is if you look at the laws required to run any business, there's probably
like thousands of laws on the books, and a lot of them are conflicting. Someone eventually will let an
LAM loose on the tax code and say, can you please simplify this by, you know, orders of magnitude
and still allow the government to function. Humans have created this tangled web of legal structures
that support certain political groups and certain interest groups and, you know, our laws in the books
from 50 or 100 years ago that have never been removed, that are still resident there.
And it can all be cleaned up, but it's not going to be cleaned up by any human.
It's going to be cleaned up by AI systems when we give a permission.
And then of even greater interest, and you know, I've discussed this before, as we move off
planet to establish new human settlements.
We can start with a clean sheet of paper and improve on the legal structures that exist
right now, but you'll do it by, say, build from first principle legal
structure. Here's what matters to us. So I'm excited about that. Me too. Any chance to get rid of
lawyers, you know, is a good thing for me. But it reminds me of, you know, harkening back to your first
question about wisdom. Where do I get my wisdom from? I get it from Shakespeare. I get it from
Epictetus. I get it from Jesus. I get it from the Torah. And in the first opening, you know,
where God is speaking to, you know, there are only creatures that are around when God says, let us,
meaning in the plural, make man in our image are angels and animals, right? Those are the only two things.
that existed according to the Torah. I'm not taking it literally necessarily, but that's what
existed. So we have an animal side and we have an angelic side in us. And then they first man and
first women are told not to eat from the tree of knowledge of good and evil. For then they shall
be as gods, right? So that's a warning to us. And my question to you is, you know, we're still
operating, as you quote in the book, you know, we're kind of like, you know, bronze age hominids or
monkeys or rota primates. I don't like to think of ourselves like that, but people can speak for
themselves when they call themselves monkeys. I'm not going to stop them. But we have these,
you know, we have this wet, squishy supercomputer in our skull, which operates on 25 watts at
0.4 millihertz or something like that, or 0.4 hertz. How are we even possibly able to take advantage
of the abundance that awaits us when we're, these primitive creatures, relatively speaking,
compared to what's coming down the line? Are we so far in advance of what we're ready for that
it's just going to be a future shock for most of us? We do an incredible. We do an incredible.
job of adapting rapidly and taking for granted the miracles amongst us. I like to say, you know,
what you did between breakfast and dinner would be godlike for your grandparents or for your parents,
right? And yet we take it for granted. I mean, if you had asked me, what would this level of
superintelligence that can diagnose you, can write anything for you, can code anything for you,
can answer any question, do all of these amazing things? What would it,
cost you per month, you know, a million dollars, 10 million dollars. I would have never guessed
zero. But yet that's where we are. We've seen a 99.9% reduction in inference costs over the
course of the last year. It's like 99% heading towards 99.99. And then at the same time,
the level of intelligence, right, these systems are now being measured in the mid-130s to 140 IQ,
not slowing down, becoming cheaper, becoming more useful. And yes,
we take it for granted.
And yes, as these systems become more and more capable,
the only way for us to take advantage of it
is going to be to couple with it.
It's either we're coupling and going for the ride
or hits taking off and we're staying down here, right?
The movie Her was a great example of that
where the AI at the end takes off
and says, you know, so long and thanks for all the fish.
So will we couple with it?
There will be integration options through BCI.
and there will be sort of loose integration options where my AI is there, just like Jarvis and Ironman,
my best analogy for it, there to just support you, help you get through your day the most efficient
you possibly can.
If you had to extrapolate, you know, combining the silicon and the pink matter here, if you had to
extrapolate, it sounds like, well, at least to me, it would be a much worse future, you know,
if I'm already overwhelmed now with productivity, pornography, pornography,
and all the other things.
I just see you having so much fun.
I'm like, I want to be Peter when I grow up,
but you're only a few years older than me.
The question I have for you is,
isn't it actually kind of like,
I don't want to say scary,
but if you're working nine days a week now,
how much are you going to be working in the future, 20?
I go back to the only thing we can control
is our mindset.
In the book, We Are As God, Stephen Kotler,
my co-author and I argue that
first half of the book is looking at the abundance thesis
we proposed back in 2012.
it became sort of a mainstay for all of the tech bros to talk about abundance, super abundance,
all of that stuff.
It's proven out and continues.
And so the book sort of continues a thesis.
It says, yes, this is where abundance is going.
There's downside of abundance, microplastics, extra calories for obesity, depression,
you know, all of these things.
But then the second half of the book is like, how do you survive this coming age?
The only mechanism I know is for you to shape your mindset.
So our brains are neural nets, right?
Every billion neurons, 100 trillion synaptic connections.
And we train in neural net, whether it's GROC or Gemini,
by showing it example after example after example of data.
And we are constantly training our neural net by the conversations we have
with brilliant people like yourself, the podcast we listen to, like this one,
The books we read, the posters on our wall, all of those things are training the way we think.
And my thesis is that your mindset is the single greatest thing you have.
If you ask yourself, who are the greatest thinkers in the world, the greatest leaders in the world, and what made them a great leader?
Whether it was Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Nushan Sari, whoever might be, Brian Keating.
What made them a great leader?
Was it the money, their technology, their friends, or was it their mindset?
I hope people would say their mindset made them a great leader.
Take away everything else.
Keep their mindset.
They're going to regain their prominence.
So if your mindset is your most important thing, what mindset do you have right now?
Where did you get it from?
And more importantly, what mindset do you need for the decade ahead?
And so we talk about shaping your mindset, agility and agency in this time of AI.
You know, if you think AI is happening to you rather than four years,
you. If you're in fear versus in optimism, all these things impact your ability to deal with
a radically departing future. One of my friends tweeted Tiago Forte, something interesting connection
between all these AI pioneers, Sam Altman, Dario Amadei, loving of God, Elon Musk, which is just an aroma,
you know. But, you know, the question I have for you is, are we creating a secular theology? I don't
work 20 days a week. I work six days a week because I take off for the Sabbath. I spend it entirely
offline with my kids, with my wife, with my family, with my friends, with my community, in meat space,
in reality, at my temple or my friends, and I don't work, I don't email, I don't tweet, I don't record
podcast. If I get invited to speak, sorry, I'm not going to do it. Now, am I doing that for culture?
Yeah, probably, but there's also, you know, there's wisdom in the people, right? So are we creating
the secular theology coming out of not Jerusalem or Vatican City, but, but, but, but there's also, you know,
out of Silicon Valley. Of course we are. There's a few documentaries done about my mentor,
dear friend Ray Kurzweil, and, you know, in one of them, it talks about, you know,
rapture of the nerds. The singularity is in one essence a religion. And we are, you know,
as the book title refers to becoming godlike. We're becoming omniscient, omnipotent,
omnipresent across the board. And we take that for granted. And with that godlike power,
what will we do with it? But we have an incredible responsibility today. And that responsibility is to
assure humanity's survival and uplifting to a greater state of wisdom. And for me, it's using all these
technologies to uplift every man, woman, and child, to provide every man, woman, and child access to the
food, water, energy, health care, education, freedom that they deserve, that every mother knows
their kids has access to that.
I think that's a more peaceful world.
Elon, when I interviewed him on my Moonshots podcast, now twice once in end of December,
we aired it in January and once at my Abundance Summit, we talked about the idea of universal
high income, his belief that we're going to see double-digit GDP growth in the next
two years and triple digit by 2030, and that we're heading to a world where AI and robots
are creating so much that you could not want enough.
to saturate their production rates.
And that's what he talks about sort of radical abundance.
So the Fourth Commandment, again, sorry to harp on my particular bandwagon today,
but the Fourth Commandment says six days, you shall work.
In other words, it's not optional.
And the seventh shall be a Sabbath to your God and so forth.
And then it goes through the different ways to observe it.
But it says you shall, and it's a mitzvah, and people think mitzvah means, oh, it's a good day.
No, it doesn't mean a good day.
It means a commandment.
It means you have to do it.
It means it's not optional.
It's like, Dow shall not murder.
So my question to you, Peter, is what does it do to people if they don't have to work?
I mean, God bless him.
I mean, I have a brother.
I'm not going to say which one.
I have three brothers.
But he's not built for the kind of the nine to five grind.
I love him so much.
But anyway, you don't get the point, Peter.
What do we do with people that, you know, they're just going to be abundant?
That doesn't give you any purpose to let.
As you know, you're one of the most purpose-driven people I've ever met.
You put your friend Tony Robbins to shame in a lot of ways because you're actually out there doing this stuff.
He's talking about stuff that you're doing.
But tell me, Peter.
Yeah, I agree with you don't have to work.
So here's the deal.
First of all, for the majority of human existence, right, call us 200,000 years old as a species,
for the majority of our existence as a species, your job was survival.
That was your job.
It was to survive.
Find food, find shelter, you know, battle against the elements or against the, you know,
the lion or tiger or whatever the case might be.
That was your job.
If you did it for five days, on the sixth day, you were dead.
So yes, you had to do that.
Sad Guru said something to me.
I was on stage with him, I don't know, 10, 12 years ago in St. Petersburg.
And he said something I would never forget.
He goes, technology is the means by which humanity takes a vacation from survival.
Wow.
That's like amazing.
So true.
One of the biggest concerns is in this future of universal high income, again, where AI
and robots are able to do anything and everything from us. I think the world is going to split.
I wrote about the five forks of humanity, how humanity is going to speciate five times across
five different areas. And one of them was the division between consumers and creators. If in fact,
AI and robotics can do anything and everything for you, will you become a couch potato sitting
on your couch with an optimist robot, bringing you a beer, and an AI?
spinning up a Netflix made for you that's starring, you know, Brian Keating and Peter D.
Amanda as Captain Kirk and Spock on a new episode that would never existed before.
You can just sit there and kick back and it's a Wally future.
You're just consuming.
You're consuming, consuming, consuming.
The flip side of the equation is can you use this extraordinary gift, God-like capabilities,
to become a creator, right?
To speak what you want to create.
And there's probably some great biblical verses there of, you know, the word creating reality.
And that's where we are right now.
With a word, with a spoken prompt, you can create what you want.
And so it's the Star Trek future.
And that comes down to purpose.
It actually comes down to purpose and curiosity, the two mindsets for me that govern.
If you have a purpose and you have the curiosity to find the tools to implement that purpose, you're golden.
We both have twins.
And I can't imagine that one of your major purposes, perhaps the biggest purpose in your whole
life, are those boys.
Yes, 100%.
But part of what drives me, Peter, quite frankly, and to be successful, even to do YouTube
because all your accomplishments, the money you've made for people, the lives you've changed,
the lives you've healed, saved the abundant future.
They don't care as much about that probably as your YouTube channel.
It's interesting because they say most kids want to be influencers when they grow up.
And it's not surprising to me because that's unique about us, Peter.
We're storytellers.
This is you and me.
We're not AI avatars yet.
And so people like that.
That's why they tune into moonshots.
I watch it every week.
I get your stuff.
I'll put links to everything.
But because it's genuine.
It's real.
It's not AI.
My question to you is when you see that the people that have purpose with declining
birth rates,
which is also kind of a concern that your friend Elon has as well.
My question is with that, people have sort of, you know,
there's been a decline in the motivation.
They talk about dinks, dual income, no kids.
They talk about all the vacations and all the abundance that they can have.
If you're abundant now, think about the abundance if you don't have kids.
So what do you say to people like that?
Get around people who are motivated.
Get experiences.
Find something that you love that turns you on in the morning,
keeps you going through the day.
The difference between passion and purpose,
passion is something you love doing.
It could be playing a sport.
It could be, you know, watching your favorite movies,
purpose is passion in service of other people. So I talked to Elon. I think you connected me
at one point. I talked to him for like 20 minutes on a podcast that I hosted two years ago. Most of it
was technical about how Starlink is going to implicate the future of astronomy, especially microwave
astronomy. You can get around to paint the Starlink's black, but you can't evade the second law
of thermodynamic. They're going to emit heat. That's what I'm trying to seek in the cosmic
microarray background. Moon is four. Yeah, exactly. So we'll talk about that. But Elon, I asked him,
because he was on and his mother was on may was on yeah and i said elan you know as a father we're both
fathers and we both know that the you know the greatest you know kind of pain that somebody a human
being can feel and i'm not even going to mention it because he's been through it and i said peter i said
you've said you want to die on mars and you know my friend and your friend elon sir martin rees said i
hope it's not on impact and i said Elon you know god willing you do it but you're going to have to say
goodbye to 14 young souls that you brought into the world how can you do that
that. And he couldn't answer. And May, his mother, jumped in and rescued him. It's the first time he's
ever been saved as far as I could tell. And he was emotional. I could hear X was on his back. And May came in and
said, let's not talk about that. You know, that's unpleasant to think about. But these are real things,
Peter. So, I mean, I couldn't say goodbye to any of my kids. So is that going to do me to not
participate in the abundance that you and Stephen talk about so effectively? So the question is, why do you
have to say goodbye? When I wrote this article on the five forks, the first fork was about
crater versus consumer. We talked about that. The next fork was determining whether you're going to
jump onto the extreme longevity bandwagon, right? Those people who will say, no, I want to live out
my normal, you know, God said, and I spent some time with a rabbi who was steeped in history talking
about human lifespan will be 120 years. But let's say that we do reach full age reversal and we can
have indefinite lifespans. Will you jump on that bandwagon? Some will.
some will not. And of course, there'll be a departure in society for those two that split. Maybe
some of your kids may and maybe some of your kids may not. So there's that departure. Then there's
going to be the group of individuals who decide to go into the cosmos. We'll have a speciation as people
stay on Earth and people go to the moon, people go to Mars. And of course, you know that evolution,
what really drives speciation is small populations, high mutation rates from environmental pressures
and geographic separation, right?
So those three things will be prominent in space and drive speciation.
Another one will be, do you get a BCI?
Do you connect your neocortex to the cloud and become a cyborg in that regard?
And then the final one is do you upload yourself, right?
Will you become an upload?
And so these are for me the five main forks of human humanity.
Some of them will have you say not goodbye,
but just take you on a different path from your kids.
For the majority of all human history, again, our 200,000-year history,
the life of your great-great-grandparents and your great-great-grandkids was the same.
Are you one of those media strategy people clicking through slides, scrolling spreadsheets?
Yes? Good. This is for you.
Because on Spotify, there's an audience that's different.
Locked in. Loyal, invested. They're called fans.
Fans don't just listen to music.
they feel seen by it like it belongs to them.
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And you're right next to artists like me, Lizzo.
So, are you ready to talk to fans?
Spotify advertising.
You're among fans.
Nothing changed over millennia.
Here, things are changing every two to five years.
And speaking of uploading yourself and the ubiquity, potential ubiquity of AIs,
what's your solution to the Fermi paradox?
The question we should be talking about as well is,
the whole UFO disclosure stuff that's going on right now.
Do you believe it?
I kind of believe that aliens could be amongst us here and be completely invisible to us.
I think that technology, you know, 50 years more advanced than today, would allow complete stealth
if they didn't want to be seen.
Can I tell you an experience I had years ago that shaped my view?
So I went to the first biosphere experiment in Arizona.
Arizona, yeah.
Right?
So you remember the Bass family funded an enclosure called the biosphere in which was it six or eight bionauts were inside for two years.
I had two friends that were in the biosphere.
And it was an interesting experiment.
And then at the same time that that went on, I then saw a television show on UFOs and aliens.
And one of the things I found fascinating was that.
that all of the stories of aliens in different parts around the world, in the Andes, in Africa,
in Europe, in the U.S., there was a consistency in the reported visuals of the aliens.
It was a consistency that was shocking in how consistent it was.
And then I connected that with the biosphere experiment and the concept that all of these abductions
that were taking place were an abduction in the middle of no place, not on the White House lawn.
And so my squishy brain puts us all together and says, oh, we're simply a biosphere experiment.
And these abductions are aliens taking samples to not disturb the system, taking samples out
in the scientific method of just sampling along the way.
And so I just think, okay, we're going to create biospheres in Mars or in,
in Jovian moons and so forth. But the ultimate experiment is you go to a planet and you seat it with
life forms and you watch them evolve. And as they evolve, you go and you grab samples and so forth.
That's the directed panspermia. You know, panspermia is one of those things that sounds dirty, Peter,
but we're mature, you know, adults, right? But you're right. It reminds me to offer your listeners.
I'm going to put in your substack, Peter, I want 100 members of your substack to get one of these meteorites.
They have to be in the USA. We'll put the link to your substack.
and like, whatever.
But this is a real meteorite that's 4.3 billion years old.
It has material on it that's biological because I touched it.
But besides that, it is one of the leading proponents.
But the question, you know, is whether or not AI is the most dominant life.
I transport these meat sacks around the galaxy when we can transmit AI and your genome and
everything else, right?
Halfway through this conversation, Peter said something, I haven't been able to shake.
That biology might not be the destination, that we may just be a vehicle,
a way for intelligence to bootstrap itself onto something more durable than carbon.
His phrase.
Not why.
We're boot disc.
We're simply a transient boot disk for intelligence.
The fact of the matter is biology can evolve slowly on a planet and at some point it gives birth to transistors and integrated circuits and GPUs and AI.
But we will then disappear and the AI will persist.
And maybe it will, you know, the panspermia model is sending out these molecules of amino acids.
and nucleic acids and letting them fall into a soup at the right temperature and the right
distance from a star and have it form life and start the cycle again.
And what do you make of the kind of miraculous nature?
This is a piece of the moon.
I debated a moon landing denier and I had to bring up the fact on Pierce Morgan that we actually
have samples that were collected not by the astronauts, but by good old fashion Isaac Newton
and gravity.
If your moonshot could not exist if the moon didn't exist and the moon only exists because
an object, you know, roughly the size of the planet Mars hit a much bigger body called Thea,
and that broke off the moon. That's one of the contingent aspects that life is dependent upon.
And then, of course, the dinosaurs, Louis Alvarez discovered the, you know, the Chixelab impact crater
that distributed the Yitriambarium layer throughout the earth at a certain time 66 million years ago.
That's another impact.
Then the great heavy bombardment where water was brought to the earth from comets.
How do we get that to be replicated throughout the universe?
I mean, that's incredibly improbable.
Or is it the result of intelligent design?
Did someone simulate if we, if we bomb, you know, here's a 10 kilometer asteroid.
We're going to strike it here in the U-Catang Peninsula and we're going to cause, you know, a mammals to uprise.
Yeah, I mean, one can go down this rabbit hole in an extraordinary fashion.
I mean, is the universe just a giant simulation and computer and all these things are easy in an infinite number of infinite universes?
A singularity university, you know, kind of was a really early entry into the promise and prospects of artificial intelligence, abundant technologies to revolutionize education.
I like to joke that, you know, I've got the safest three hour a week job in the world, Peter, because you and I, you know, started our podcast journey together in 2020 during C.
We've known each other for a decade or more, thanks to your stewardship of the early Arthur C. Clark Center for Human Imagination here.
Still going on, still referencing you very much, and we hope to have you back.
But the pandemic, I thought was the end for it, right? Zoom, horrible. I got the worst teaching reviews in my life. And yet AI seems to be, you know, kind of that on steroids where who needs Brian Keating to teach him when you can have, you know, this guy, Carl Sagan, you know, come through and teach or Isaac Newton or Peter Diamandis, or Peter Diamandis or Einstein. Here's my Einstein free fall experiment. So Peter, tell me, are we going to have like AI slop professors? You know, is my job safe for another thousand years like it has been for the past thousand years?
Well, the answer is I don't know. And it's an area that I care deeply about having to 14, soon, 15 year old kids, because I do not believe high school is preparing our kids for the future at all. And so I think it needs to be reinvented. I personally, you know, I'm working on building out a company to reinvent high school and then college because I think we have a retrospective, industrialized education program that no longer serves us and we need to reinvent it, clean sheet, and so.
So I'm going to dive in to some degree there.
The concept that we teach everybody the exact same way because we have the sage on the stage
and an audience of 100 to 500 people in a lecture hall is kind of pathetic, especially since
some kids are auditory or visual or tactile learners.
I still think human to human interaction is really important.
I think we communicate on a very different level across a wide range of space.
spectrum of stuff I don't understand when I'm connecting with you. I feel different than having
this conversation with your avatar, though my avatar could do a much better job of having a
conversation with your avatar, not forgetting anything, bringing facts instantly available.
Communicating and binary. Yeah, exactly. But still, there's a human element. And we're going
to figure out what it means to be human and why that's important, almost by subtracting.
in a very short time.
Let me hit on one subject important to me that I think is important to you as well,
that I want to reach out to everyone listening right now.
It's called the Future Vision XPRIZ.
So here is what's going on.
I believe there's a lot of fear that's growing in the world as a result of people's concerns
about AI and robotics.
And I think the fear comes from two areas.
One, people not knowing whether they're going to have a job in the future, whether they can get a job in the future.
And that is very real, that fear for them.
The second is that Hollywood has consistently just, it's Ex Machina, it's Terminator, it's Black Mirror, it's all of these television shows and movies giving us this negative vision of the future.
And if that's the way, if Hollywood is educating the world, that that's the way AI and robots are going to be, why would you ever want to live in that?
that future. Star Trek, for me, was what I got weaned on. It was the Apollo program in Star Trek.
And Star Trek showed us a future in which humanity and technology collaborated to do extraordinary
things. And so about six months ago, I started a journey with Rod Roddenberry, the son of Gene
Ronbury, the creator of Star Trek, Kathy Wood from Ark Invest, Mark Benioff, and my friends at Google.
And we've launched an XPRIZE, called the Future Vision XPRIZE. You can go to Future
VisionXPrize.com. It's a global film creative competition. So we invite teams to generate a three-minute
film trailer and a written film treatment for the movie you want to create that shows a hopeful,
compelling vision of the future. So we want an amazing movie that people want to watch.
It's got a great storyline. And it shows more of a Star Trek future than a Terminator future.
So our goal is to flood YouTube with 10,000 positive storylines and then to actually create at least one global feature film release of the winner of this every year and create this engine for positive storytelling that flips the scripts.
But here's something that just came out this week that's even more important, why this is important.
If you remember some months ago, Claude was noted to be blackmailing people.
In 96% of the cases when Claude was being threatened to shut down, it would blackmail the humans, the threaten to shut it down.
And Claude recently, or Anthropic recently went back and said, why was this happening?
What was in the training data?
And what was in the training data was all these dystopian movies showing AI, cheating, killing,
you know, being negative. And so we were literally training AI to be misaligned. And so this future
vision XPRIZE has a much bigger purpose all of a sudden, which is not only to help give people
train our neural nets about a positive vision of the future, but to train the AIs on this data
of a positive vision in the future. I want to encourage everybody, if you're creative,
If you're using any of the AI engines or your filmmaker, you can use AI or not use AI.
You can do it in stop motion.
You can do it with live character, whatever.
Three-minute trailer.
And if you win this competition, we will make your film.
Probably commit $15 plus million and do a global release of your movie.
So enter this competition, future visionxprice.com.
One of my friends, Dennis Prager, says, you know, there's two things you never see depicted positive.
in Hollywood movies. One of them is Israel and Jews. Usually it's a Holocaust or Palestine or something
really bad. So it's no wonder that people really have cultural negative feelings about Israel.
And the other one is marriage. And like fatherhood, usually his father's an idiot. And marriage is like,
oh, you're cheating on me and there's divorce. And so yes, I think it's really good to have this.
It's not Pollyannish at all. Peter's back, the tricorder XPRIZEEEE in San Diego, many years
ago, Eric Viri, double doctor, PhD, director now. Our mutual friend, thanks to you introducing me,
Ahmad Mastak, gives us 800 days basically left, till humans add negative economic value. They're already
sort of doing it, but the last economy comes about where humans will be perceived as adding negative
economic value. I would not disagree with that. I think the fact of matter is every industry is
going to be reinvented and we're about to reinvent the global economy. I mean, the reality is the
intermost loop of chips, energy, and infrastructure is driving the majority of all the economic
return. We humans are interim in enabling those things, but those things in their own
drive what Elon said as a double-digit GDP growth in two years and triple digit in five
years. And we're about to see the other thing that Imad is a closeted, not only physicist,
but a closeted economist on the top of AI. And so I agree. Economic
Two.O, which we've been living, is dead, and we're about to enter economics 3.0.
So one of the most important things in my conversation, again, that you helped nucleate and
catalyze Stephen Kotler a few years ago on my podcast is about flow. And you guys talk about the
flow state, collective, and so forth. But it's driven in some sense by sense of purpose,
sense of meaning, which is often driven by scarcity, you know, ironically, that you notice
that you, like, I want to get in shape so I can ask that girl out. I want to make more money.
so I can, you know, in a post-scarcity world, where does that leave flow?
This is about how do we use the existing meat sac, the two kilograms of mush optimized, right?
It's always going to be how we maximize the utility of our 100 billion neurons and our 100 trillion synaptic
connections.
And then to go beyond that, we need to hop onto a different computational infrastructure,
and that's BCI or some version thereof.
So your friend Ray Kurzweil is famous for having a 74% success ratio on his predictions, which implies that he has a 26% failure rate.
That's important because scientifically speaking, we're not judged by predictions which could be either wrong or right like astrology.
We're judged on that which could be possibly falsified, to quote Carl Popper.
I want to ask you, what would falsify some of your theses in this book or generally speaking?
If I told you an AI will never be able to prove Fermat's last theorem, something that we did 30 years ago as a species,
Would that not falsify some of the abundant theses that you project?
So first of all, I would say that AI today, if it never improved beyond this moment, would have profound impacts on the human race.
AI today is the best diagnostician.
AI today can be the best educator.
AI today can help increase the productivity of anyone who properly utilizes it.
So AI does not need to become the solution to all mass.
mathematics to have profound positive impact on increasing abundance in the world.
So no, it would not falsify it.
Now, to get 100x greater, yeah, we need more intelligent.
The thing that separates us humans from all animals on the planet, we're not the fastest,
not the strongest.
We are hopefully, potentially the most intelligent.
And intelligence does it become a product or a service?
We now saw just released recently, right, AI's hitting IQs in the mid upper 130s.
will continue on. And so, you know, average IQ for humans is 100 by definition. And so how do we move
the entire human race to become more intelligent? That's good, because I always say I got 100 on my IQ test.
Aren't you proud of me, Mom? I love that. I'm going to use that. The human body, I want
to you put on your medical doctor. I asked this of Andrew Huberman when I was on his podcast.
There are certain things with the human eye that are just incomprehensibly magnificent. The retina is
almost completely over designed. And yet, there are things that get in the way of the retina,
like floaters in your eye and color vision. Are there cures for that coming down the pipe?
I have floaters now, and it does distract me when I'm flying sometime, not terribly, or when I'm
looking through a telescope. Is there hope coming down, or cartilage or teeth? You beautiful teeth,
Peter. So the teeth are artificial, which is why they're beautiful, right?
Well, compliments to your dentist. Thank you. So right now, David Sinclair is running a series of
age reversal experiments in the human eye. He did this work using three of the four Yamanaka
factors in his company called Life Biocciences, full disclosure. I'm an investor in life biosciences.
And he demonstrated in mice and then in primates the ability to use epigenetic reprogramming to
reverse the age and the function of degrading eyes in particular to in nion, which is eye strokes
and in macular degeneration.
And so that experiments are now being done in humans.
And so the idea is that we were never designed
until past age 30.
We would be in our peak physiological health,
in our late 20s, up to 30.
Why?
Because we would become pregnant at age 12 or 13.
And by 26, 27, 28, you were a grandparent.
And before food was abundant in the world 100,000 years ago,
if you wanted to perpetuate this,
species, you would not steal food from your grandchildren's mouths and you would die.
And so it was a slow decline from 30 on down. And a lot of that decline is epigenetic drift.
The genes that should be on get turned off. The genes that should be off get turned on.
And the work that David and others are doing in the hottest area of age reversal is epigenetic
reprogramming, taking your epigenome back to an earlier state of youth where things can be
back up to optimal functioning. So a lot going on there. Okay, last question. You'll remember from our first
conversation on the podcast, Sir Arthur C. Clark said the only way to discover the limits of the possible
is to go beyond them into the impossible. I asked you back then, and 2020 during COVID,
I asked you on the podcast, what would you do to tell if you had 30 seconds to talk to your 20-year-old
self? What would you tell Peter back then, give him the courage to go into the impossible?
But now I want to ask you, you get to go forward 30 years.
You're going to be alive and well, and your skin and hair is going to look better because you age and reverse, my friend.
What do you tell Peter 30 years from now?
That what matters most is being a good human and uplift your family, your friends.
It's so easy to get caught up in everything else.
But at the end of the day, what matters is our humanity.
Peter, love it.
Love you.
I got to teach.
It's great to see you, my brother.
Thank you, so much fun.
Peter will tell you the future is abundant.
The machines are getting wise.
The only thing standing between you and a godlike life is your own mindset.
I listen to his podcast on the days the doom gets too loud.
And every time we talk, I leave thinking, well, maybe the actual future might be okay.
If Peter is the optimist, the man who's on the other side of this, from the inside, is my friend, Amanda Stack.
He built stability AI, and he's read the safety literature.
And when he sat down with me, he said,
that you guys can on here, that adding a human to the team will make teams of the future worse.
So if you want to hear the rest of the conversation, the part that we didn't get into,
Archie Mons interview next.
Link's on screen.
We are as God's, the future of Vision, X Prize, and Peter Substack from me below.
I'll see you next time.
I'm into the impossible.
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