Who is the smartest person you’ve ever known? “Human empathy, and the ability to see around corners” are what separate the mere “commodity” of a high SAT score or GMAT score, from true world-changing intelligence.
Pascal BORNET
I watched Jensen Huang being asked who the smartest person he’s ever met was.
He smiled — and refused to answer.
Instead, he questioned the question itself.
He said what we call “smart” — coding, solving complex problems, optimizing systems — is quickly becoming commoditized.
AI already does that better.
That struck me.
Because it means intelligence is no longer about how fast we think — but how deeply we understand.
Jensen said the future belongs to those with emotional depth, adaptability, critical thinking, and the ability to navigate ambiguity.
I couldn’t agree more.
In a world where machines learn patterns, humans must learn perspective.
Maybe being smart isn’t about knowing more…
It’s about feeling and deciding better.
What do you think — are we ready to redefine intelligence for the AI age?
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