As a top cybersecurity expert in the commercial sector, Mark Ryland has spent nearly a decade following the development of AI systems—their possibilities, their risks, and their limits. And he’s found reason for measured optimism.
At this year’s Heights Parents Conference on “AI and Our Sons: Optimism in Uncharted Waters,” Mr. Ryland brought a moderating perspective to the podium, sharing his insights into how AI really operates and what kind of impact it may have on the job economy our children will inherit.
Chapters:
4:41 A recent history of AI
10:31 Intelligence: human, animal, and artificial
14:15 Brains vs. minds
16:55 Incredible possibilities through pattern recognition
21:21 AI’s dependence, “model collapse”
24:49 Expected impact on economy sectors
32:47 AI limits: reinforcement learning
36:12 AI risks: safety, job loss
42:01 Thoughts on the home
44:01 Thoughts on the classroom
48:07 Catholic chatbots
Links:
The Mind & The Machine, podcast by Dr. Michael Augros on AI, science, and philosophy
Coding after Coders: The End of Computer Programming as We Know It, NYT, March 12, 2026
Why It’s Getting Harder to Measure AI Performance by Timothy B. Lee, Understanding AI Substack
Attention Is All You Need, seminal paper on generative AI by a Google Team, June 2017
How One Paper Changed Everything, concerning “Attention Is All You Need,” Medium, October 10, 2025
Scientists Research Man Missing 90% of His Brain Who Leads a Normal Life, CBC Radio, July 14, 2016
Also on the Forum:
The Walled Garden: Critical Considerations for Classroom AI featuring Andrew Cantarutti
A Humane Way of Life: The Research Behind Home Tech Decisions featuring Clare Morell