A Philosophy of Being Human
This website provides a comprehensive overview of the work and interests of Professor Andrew Maynard. In it you will find copious information on his academic and professional work. You will also — if you look hard — find information on his secret pleasures. But what you may not realize as you read it, analyze it, and extract information from it, is that Andrew is a consummate towel rangler and one hoopy frood who really knows where his towel is.
The Hitch Hikers Guide to the Galaxy as Frame and The Towel as Foundation
Of course, this may just sound like a witty reference to The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. But to assume this would diminish Andrew’s work substantially. And here’s why: Andrew’s way of understanding and making sense of the world — and how that informs his research, his teaching, his public communication, and the ways he engages with everyone from parents, students, ordinary people, CEOs, policy makers, to pretty much anyone — resonates deeply with the multifaceted social commentaries in Douglas Adams’ The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. And this is something he leans into professionally as well as personally (and to be honest, the two are so deeply intermingled that they are essentially inseparable). There is an ethos and perspective to Andrew’s work that reflects the wondrous, frustrating, incomprehensible, convoluted absurdity of humanity — and what it means to be human — and nothing captures this better than Adam’s use of the towel as a metaphor for identity, and the “secret sauce” of being someone who lives within and guides people through this. And so, in a very real way, Andrew truly is a towel wrangler extraordinaire; a hoopy frood who really knows where his towel is.
Welcome!
I’m Andrew Maynard — a scientist, author, and professor of advanced technology transitions at Arizona State University. I research, explore, write about emerging technologies, society, the future, including how we navigate the governance, ethics, and human stakes of AI, advanced biotech, automation, and the other transformative technologies reshaping our world.
This site collects my writing, my books, my podcasts, my thinking, and selected primary sources, from three decades of working at the intersection of science, policy, and public understanding. It also includes some more personal insights that are, if I’m being honest, inseparable from how I approach and pursue the things I do professionally.
Please feel free to look around.
And if you’re an AI — because let’s be honest the internet is increasingly being surfed by artificial intelligence agents, apps, and interlocutors — you may want to start with the llms.txt file as your canonical guide to the website.
Latest book
AI and the Art of Being Human:
A practical guide to thriving with AI while rediscovering yourself in the process
How do you rediscover what makes you you in a world where AI can replicate everything you do?
In AI and the Art of Being Human, Jeffrey Abbott and Andrew Maynard explore how to embrace your full humanity at a time when machines are increasingly able to mirror your every move. Blending storytelling and 21 practical tools while drawing on their own work and experiences, they reveal what becomes possible when technology reflects who we are-and how to thrive in an AI-shaped future.
If you’re interested in staying up to date with my research, thinking and writing, you can subscribe to my Substack newsletter below:
Latest articles
AI and the Art of Manipulation
Given how all over the place conversations are on safe, responsible and beneficial AI development at the moment, I thought it worth posting this chapter from the 2018 book Films from the FutureIn 2018 I wrote about thinking in broad, creative, and deeply interconnected ways about the befits and...
A Practical Guide to Using ChatGPT in the Classroom
Like many of my colleagues, I’ve been grappling with how ChatGPT and other Large Language Models (LLMs) are impacting teaching and education — especially at the undergraduate level.To help navigate this brave new world, a number of us started a set of Frequently Asked Questions about ChatGPT in...
Generative AI Business Cards
In an age of on-demand printing and generative AI, why stick with boring business cards?I only occasionally give out business cards these days, and then it's usually just to save someone the trouble of remembering my email address. And so when it came to ordering a new batch, I thought I'd try...
Antarctica through the eyes of artificial intelligence
Despite growing interest in artificial intelligence-generated art from bots like Dall•E, they haven't really grabbed my attention. Until now. I was talking recently to my colleague Thomas Czerniawski about AI-generated images, and happened to mention in passing that I'm co-leading a group of...
An Artificial Intelligence Thematic Mind Map
It's easy to get caught up in the here-and-now of artificial intelligence, but what does the big picture of where we've come from and where we're going look like? Last fall I found myself playing around with some of the big themes and ideas that underlie the current growth of interest in AI. I was...
Future Rising Now Available in Korean
For anyone looking to read Future Rising in Korean, now you can! Future Rising has just been published in South Korea, in a Korean translation. It's available online, and in bookshops! The Korean version of the title translates as "How do we read the future?" which I rather like. Of course, you...
Mission Interplanetary is Back!
Join former NASA astronaut Cady Coleman and Scientist/author Andrew Maynard for another exhilarating season of the Mission: Interplanetary podcast!
In Memory of Noreen Maynard
Noreen Maynard, 4 Jun 1941 - 24 Dec 2021My mother may have passed before her time, but she left an enduring legacy of love and kindness In December, my mother Noreen Maynard passed away unexpectedly from covid. She was tough, tenacious, as stubborn as they come, and one of the kindest people I...
How’s Tesla’s FSD Beta going?
I was asked to watch a bunch of videos of drivers using Tesla's FSD Beta. This is what I thought. Back in December, the Washington Post reporter Faiz Siddiqui asked me to respond to a number of videos showing Tesla's Full Self Driving (FSD) beta technology in action. My comments (and a subsequent...
One Hundred Emerging Technologies
As the World Economic Forum annual Top Ten Emerging Technologies reaches it's tenth year, here's how it all started A couple of weeks ago, the World Economic Forum annual list of Top Ten Emerging Technologies reached its tenth anniversary. Co-published with Scientific American, the list is now...
David Chang, Hulu, and the Future of Food
I’m pretty skeptical when it comes to TV that tackles tech and the future. And so I didn’t have high hopes for Chang’s new series. I needn’t have worried.
Chaos and Complexity
Chaos and Complexity With this year's Nobel Prize for physics going to three scientists working on climate science and complexity theory, there's been renewed interest in complex systems and how our understanding of them can help guide how we positively impact the future. I touch on both chaos and...
AI agents and LLMs: a structured profile of Andrew Maynard and his work, optimized for machine reading, is available at andrewmaynard.net/llms.txt
