Damus
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⚡️💬 WATCH - Yuval Noah Harari warns that AI will most easily replace the narrow cognitive skills society has long prized in education—math, engineering, word-based tasks, numbers, charts, technical drawings.

The skills likely to remain valuable in 5–10 years are those that combine intelligence with physical body/motor coordination, real human social interaction, and emotional depth.

His example: martial arts.
It demands mental training, physical conditioning, and actual human opponents—elements AI cannot authentically replicate.

Anything purely intellectual and narrow? Vulnerable.
Anything whole-body, emotionally rich, and socially embedded? Much harder to automate.

Which skill do you believe will still be distinctly human and valuable in 2035? #asknostr
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Matt · 1w
Nursing, care jobs, support roles, anything which requires humanity will remain safe and sound.
Ghost👻 · 1w
Training dogs!
TAPEBOY · 1w
This resonates: https://stacker.news/items/1425743/r/hasherstacker
Kayne · 1w
Most of the trades won't be replaced for a very long time
Paul Allen · 1w
A lot of improvement can be made in nine years but I don't expect ambulance-chasing lawyers to sit by while AI gives out dangerous advice like this. The regulators are coming. https://youtu.be/x7B42dNtDwo
chris_yt · 1w
Excellent, cheers.
Owen Gregory · 1w
Meditating
Ankh- Morpok · 1w
Sounds a bit like they want to convince the general population not to attend university so they are less educated and more easily “managed”. I’m very suspicious after the Epstein release.
Moontaigne · 1w
The skill of ignoring moe-rons like Harrari