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Welcome To IANS Live - ENTERTAINMENT - 'Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Power' a grim wake-up call for India (Book Review) ianslive.in - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ianslive.in Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
AI Is âMoronisingâ And âColonisingâ Us All Over Again, Says Rajiv Malhotraâs Book by R Jagannathan - Feb 9, 2021 01:06 PM The cover of Rajiv Malhotraâs book, Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Power: 5 Battlegrounds. Snapshot Every policy-maker in India should read Rajiv Malhotraâs book to understand what we are up against and what we need to do to overcome our tech deficits. We donât have much time to lose. Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Power: 5 Battlegrounds. Rajiv Malhotra. Rupa Publications India. 2021. Page 520. Rs 450. One the greatest challenges facing modern democracies is the speed of technological change, which makes it difficult for society â any society â to even begin to understand technologyâs impact on itself. ....
Sanskrit sound vibrations inspired creation January 8, 2021, 7:29 AM IST Sanskrit is called deva bhasha, language of gods. It is regarded as a divine language. Sanskrit letters are called akshara, imperishable. They are neither created nor destroyed. When they are pronounced, they are not created; they become manifest. According to the Bhagavata Purana, the Sanskrit letters manifested from the mouth of Brahma with divisions such as svaras, vowels, and vyanjanas, consonants, according to the pronunciation. It is from the sound of these letters that the world was created. There are 33 vyanjanas, which represent the 33 devas, namely, 12 Adityas, 11 Rudras, eight Vasus, and two Ashvini Kumaras. The first 25 vyanjanas beginning with ‘k’ are grouped in five sets, each having five vyanjanas. They represent the five sets of mahabhutas, material elements; five karmendriyas, working senses; five jnanendriyas, cognitive senses; five tanmatras, subtle element ....
This article is part of the opinion column – Beyond Occident – where we explore a native perspective on the Indian diaspora. A Harvard Kennedy School academic had recently tweeted saying, “Hindus are sick people of India, it is their religious books who (sic) train the mind.” A couple of years ago, another faculty at Rutgers University’s history department had tweeted that Mata Sita, in Valmiki’s Ramayana, basically tells Bhagwan Rama that he is a “misogynist pig and uncouth.” Yet another faculty at the Uppsala University’s Department of Peace and Conflict Research had made a “Gau Mutra” (cow urine, a common taunt against the Hindus by the jihadists) comment in his tweet. ....