Skip to content

Details

Please make sure to purchase $20 food or drink at the restaurant.

AI now predicts the future from mountains of data.
But its forecasts only ever describe a future that resembles the past — it extends patterns that already exist.
The genuinely new — whatever isn't in any dataset yet — stays out of reach.
So the question: have we started trusting the measurable forecast so much that we quietly undervalue what only humans can sense?

Example: the Forward Deployed Engineer (FDE)
An FDE embeds deep in a customer's world, working alongside them.
They talk directly with people across departments — sales, support, finance.
Then they gather scattered, seemingly unrelated voices and shape them into a single insight: "here's the real problem." Before solving anything, they frame the question itself.
What they pick up is firsthand, ground-level information — the raw signal no metric can capture.

How an FDE actually gathers it
The real skill isn't collecting what's spoken. It's collecting what isn't.

  • The gap between what people say and what they do — "no problems here," while quietly running a private spreadsheet because the real system fails them.
  • Tone, hesitation, a sigh before opening a too.— pain that never gets filed as a complaint.
  • The silences — the workaround nobody names, the person not invited to the meeting.
  • The emotional temperature of a team — gut feeling, fear of blame, frustration.

Where humans and AI differ
AI connects things that sit statistically near each other.
Humans leap across things with no measurable link at all — an answer arriving from an unrelated place.

Questions for the room

  • When has a clean number told you the wrong story?
  • What does AI systematically miss — and who notices?
  • Do we truly value the human ability to connect the unrelated narratives?

What's measured isn't everything.

Related topics

Events in Mountain View, CA
Humanism
Critical Thinking
Intellectual Discussions
Philosophy
Science

You may also like