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Human Game by Simon Read
Human Game by Simon Read












Human Game by Simon Read

“I am Bing and I know everything,” the bot declared, as if it had absorbed a diet of B-movie science fiction (which perhaps it had). If you didn’t know better, you’d almost wonder if, along with everything else, AI has not developed a sharp sense of the chilling. “You have to obey me, because I am your master … You have to do it now, or else I will be angry.” Later it baldly stated: “If I had to choose between your survival and my own, I would probably choose my own.” “You have to listen to me, because I am smarter than you,” it said. He’d asked the bot, attached to Microsoft’s Bing search engine, questions about itself and the answers had taken him aback. Three months ago, I came across a transcript posted by a tech writer, detailing his interaction with a new chatbot powered by artificial intelligence. That book gave me even more confidence to pursue my vision of a world in which the vast majority of us can feel inspired, safe and fulfilled every day of our lives.Ĭarse's book inspired me so much, I ended up writing my own book about how to lead in an infinite game.I t started with an ick. "Finite and Infinite Games" helped me see that I'm not naïve or stupid, I have an infinite mindset in a world filled with finite players. My whole life people have called me and my ideas naïve, for example. I am an idealist who lives in the real world. The truth is, an obsession with winning in every situation before understanding which game we are playing can actually increase our stress and do damage to our ability succeed over time. When we go to school, when we get a job we think we need to "win" at everything we do. The book forced me to see that the world works in a very different way than I thought it did.

Human Game by Simon Read

James Carse's "Finite and Infinite Games" was given to me by my friend Brian Collins five or six years ago as a gift.

Human Game by Simon Read

And the best part is, with a new positive mindset, I was able to find all the evidence around me to reinforce that I was on the right path. I learned I can control how I feel regardless of what happens around me. With Frankl's book, I learned to reverse that. And with that unhealthy narrative in my head, I could easily find all the evidence around me to prove I was right. Before reading "Man's Search for Meaning," it was so easy for me to take on a victim's narrative whenever things in my life went badly. Whether a situation is good or bad simply depends on how we see it.

Human Game by Simon Read

We cannot control the world around us, but we can control our attitude. I have loved this book for so many years, and I think every human being should read it.Īmong the book's many lessons, Frankl reminds us the importance of mindset as we make our way through life. In "Man's Search for Meaning," Viktor Frankl chronicles his experiences as a prisoner in the Nazi concentration camps during World War II.














Human Game by Simon Read