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Why Soumitra Dutta's Views On Artificial Intelligence Are More Relevant Than Ever

The Rising Impact of Artificial Intelligence

By David WilliamPublished about 2 hours ago 3 min read

Soumitra Dutta, the former dean of Oxford’s Said Business School, has spent his career developing colleges and business schools and has always been vocal about the fact that he is proud of his dedication to work, as it results in building companies that eventually pave the way for more employment opportunities. As Soumitra Dutta rightly states, education and learning systems are not traditions that need preservation but are something that are bound to evolve and blend in with changing times. Mr. Dutta is right to believe that as education continues to change its faces and forms, everyone must adapt to it, including the teachers and students.

Should MBA Courses Include AI as a Compulsory Subject?

The most coveted degree that millions of aspirers apply for every year seems to be stuck in time, and as Soumitra Dutta once suggested, maybe it's high time that universities and higher education systems consider some modifications, rather than additions. Looking at how frequently wars are going on between superpowers in the twenty-first century, it feels like the students of business administration must also need to understand how to protect their businesses in case they are caught in the crossfire. Similarly, the use of artificial intelligence has become so common in wars that everyone must feel like using this tool to their advantage. This is exactly why future leaders, while they are still in the classroom, must be taught about the ethical use of AI and how it must come across as a technology that favors human lives and not takes them.

Soumitra Always Suggests Looking at AI As A Tool, Not For Dependency

What Soumitra Dutta is smart enough to point out is that technology has been evolving for many years now; it is not something that we as humans are new to, just because of the advent of artificial intelligence. So the real question to ask is that 'why is it that humans are facing a lot of disruption when they are witnessing an evolution in technology'. People had their doubts with Tesla’s invention of the modern-day alternating current. They had their sour opinions and judgmental thoughts with or Graham Bell’s invention of the telephone, but that did not stop inventors from building smartphones.  Because if an educational institution is unable to find relevance with the evolving technology, soon they will become irrelevant and find themselves distancing from contemporary times. So now it is up to educational institutions and universities to determine how they are going to leverage artificial intelligence, as digital technology seems to be at its peak, with education no longer restricted to textbooks and blackboards.

Soumtira Dutta former oxford dean has always been vocal about the fact that education must evolve with time. And now that we are witnessing wars on an almost regular basis, is it time to bring back the methods that schools adopted back in the day during World War I and World War II days where students are taught about survival skills and what they must do in case they are in a situation that feels dicey? What really must happen is that universities and colleges must find ways to leverage AI and help students stay relevant to real-world scenarios while continuing their curriculum studies in the background.

Soumitra Dutta is one of those very few academicians who want to study and witness what the future of artificial intelligence holds. However, what is interesting to witness is how AI will be optimized in this new era of wars, where it seems like governing this evolving technology has become the need of the hour.

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About the Creator

David William

David William is an author and thought leader who writes on business, technology, artificial intelligence, and finance.

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