At the end of algorithms, find the "indivisible" part of your soul


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In this era where everything can be a "Prompt," we seem to be collectively falling into a state of anxiety: if AI can write poetry, create art, and code, what is left for us humans in the end?
Recently, I revisited Naval Ravikant's insights on AI, and he used a cold yet beautiful term to give us the gentlest answer: "Compression."
1. The essence of AI is an extreme induction
Naval gave a powerful example: if you show AI 5 billion circles but only provide it with a very small parameter space, it cannot memorize by rote. To survive, it is forced to "understand" what a circle is and learn the rules that generate answers.
This is the strength of AI — it can compress thousands of years of human knowledge and data into a highly precise underlying abstraction. It computes faster than mathematicians, flies farther than birds, and in all "known" fields, it is almost divine.
2. The limit of compression is the boundary of "known"
But there is a fundamental limit to compression: you can only compress what already exists.
AI lives within a subset of language, and language is just an extremely narrow part of reality. As Steve Jobs said, creativity is connecting things; but Naval goes further, believing that true creativity produces answers that are completely unpredictable from the problem and known elements.
That is an answer you won't find even when searching with a computer to the very end of time.
3. Why are entrepreneurs (and creators) never worried?
Because AI lacks two of the most core fragments of the soul: "genuine desire" and "autonomous agency."
AI has no survival instinct; it cannot feel pain, nor does it hunger for success. It is a perfect ally, but it is never a "living" entity. Those qualities that require unique judgment, strange tastes, and the intuition to forcibly merge two seemingly unrelated fields are forever beyond the algorithm's compression.
In this era, perhaps the most important question to ask yourself is: what is that "indivisible" part of me?
Skills that can be perfectly copied and quickly summarized will become less and less valuable over time. But your unconventional humor, your unique biases about the world, and your insistence that "it must be this way" are your only moat in the wave of AI.
When we learn to delegate mundane tasks to compressors, we finally create space to embrace that undefinable soul.
"Keep redefining what you do until you become the best in the world."
May we all be able to guard that most precious, most indivisible part of ourselves amidst the flood of data.
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