Mo Gawdat: AI Made IQ and EQ Accessible to Everyone, What Now?

Jun 6, 2026 #MoGawdat#ArtificialIntelligence#AI

Artificial intelligence is no longer just a tool for faster emails, summaries, or basic productivity. The deeper shift is that intelligence itself is becoming accessible on demand. This section breaks down the idea of augmented intelligence: humans and machines working together to create outcomes neither could produce alone. The comparison to chess is important. After machines surpassed humans, the most interesting evolution was not human versus machine, but human plus machine. That partnership created new strategies, new moves, and new levels of performance. The same shift is now happening across writing, research, technology, science, business, and creativity. Used lightly, AI saves time. Used seriously, it can expand thinking, challenge assumptions, compare perspectives, deepen research, and help build things that were previously impossible. The real question is not whether AI can replace human intelligence. The bigger question is what becomes possible when human intelligence is amplified. This keynote was originally delivered at NTLF 2026 by nasscom.    • Not the End of Human Decisions but the Beg…  

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Speakers Corner: Trust Expert Rachel Botsman in conversation with Nick Gold

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Michael Mansfield QC, a legal person I have long respected. He shares his experience of the suicide of his daughter Anna.

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Axios: Revenge of the AI bubble

Revenge of the AI bubble
 
Animated illustration of a bubble with a sparkle shape inside it bouncing off the four sides of the frame.
Illustration: Brendan Lynch/Axios
 
The AI bubble debate has lurched through at least three frenzied phases in the span of three years, Axios’ Zachary Basu writes.

Suspicion: Historic sums of capital poured into AI before anyone proved it could reliably automate work. A violent market correction felt inevitable.

Mania: Claude Code and autonomous agents made the early skepticism look outdated, fueling a corporate scramble to embed AI everywhere and maximize usage.

Reckoning: Companies discovered that AI can be extraordinary when aimed precisely — and ruinously expensive when treated as a universal productivity machine.

Why it matters: The first phase doubted the technology. The second phase worshipped it. The third phase — currently gaining steam across Corporate America — questions whether AI’s immense power is worth the price.

🔎 Zoom in: The case against AI used to come from outsiders — Luddites, “doomers,” short sellers betting on a crash. Its newest skeptics are emerging from inside the boom.

Uber capped employee AI usage after burning through its annual Claude Code budget in four months. A top executive said the spending was getting “harder to justify,” with no clear link between token use and more useful consumer features.

Amazon shut down an internal token leaderboard after employees gamed it with throwaway tasks to climb the rankings. An Amazon executive told staff, “Please don’t use AI just for the sake of using AI.”

GitHub moved Copilot, the AI coding assistant used by millions of developers, to usage-based billing as part of its effort to create a “sustainable” business. The change shocked users who were suddenly confronted with the true cost of heavy AI usage.

Bain surveyed 951 large companies and found AI savings falling well below projections, even as most firms planned to spend more. “The technology worked. The value didn’t arrive,” the report concluded.

The intrigue: Even OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has acknowledged the new concerns, calling the question of whether AI spending will show up in revenue “the most fair criticism” of the moment.

🎯 Reality check: The companies sounding the alarm are the early adopters. Most of the economy is still at the starting line, while the pioneers are the ones absorbing the cost shocks, wasted tokens and employee backlash.

AI is already creating real value for chipmakers, model labs and some power users. The harder question is whether that value spreads across the companies paying to deploy it.

By the numbers: Wall Street got a fresh reminder yesterday of how much AI optimism is baked into markets.

The Nasdaq plummeted 4.2%, recording its worst day and worst week in more than a year. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index plunged 10.3%, its worst day in more than six years.

One culprit was Broadcom: The chipmaker reported explosive AI growth, but failed to raise its longer-term AI revenue outlook — disappointing investors looking for signs that demand was still accelerating.

The bottom line: AI can make the right worker dramatically more productive, but those gains depend on knowing exactly where and how to apply it. The real bubble may have been the assumption that AI could be sprayed across companies, employees and workflows and reliably pay for itself.Share this story.
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Cleveland Clinic: Broca’s Aphasia. Comment: 30+ years on with Broca’s aphasia … this explains so well what goes on in my head with frustration especially when people don’t understand what I understand and am trying to put in a sequence of words which is plucking words out of the sky and trying to match them into something that can be spoken and understood. Note no cure. Why?

Broca’s Aphasia

Medically Reviewed.Last updated on 11/19/2024.

Broca’s aphasia is a language disorder that affects communication. You know what to say but have trouble speaking. It takes a lot of effort to say a complete sentence so you may remove certain words to make it easier. Aphasia can lead to social isolation and mental health challenges. Speech therapy can help.

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Contents Overview Symptoms and Causes Diagnosis and Tests Management and TreatmentOutlook / Prognosis Prevention Living With

What is Broca’s aphasia?

Broca’s aphasia is an expressive language disorder that affects how you speak (your fluency) but not your understanding of words (your comprehension). You might have trouble forming sentences longer than four words, finding the right words for a sentence or making the correct sounds to say each word. It may be easier for you to read than write.

The following are examples of Broca’s aphasia speech:

  • “Want water now” instead of “I want a glass of water.”
  • “Me go store buy milk” instead of “I’m going to the store to buy milk.”
  • “Dog dog park” instead of “There are two dogs at the park.”

Broca’s aphasia, sometimes called expressive aphasia, is the most common form of non-fluent aphasia. It usually happens after brain damage from a stroke or traumatic brain injury.

Symptoms and Causes

What are the symptoms of Broca’s aphasia?

The symptoms of Broca’s aphasia affect your communication skills. You know what to say but can’t say it. You may:

  • Have trouble forming sentences.
  • Only use a few words instead of saying a full sentence.
  • Rely on nouns and/or leave out linking words (conjunctions like “and,” “or” and “but”).
  • Have trouble repeating phrases and sentences.

Broca’s aphasia doesn’t affect your intelligence. You might have trouble understanding long, complex sentences at times, but not always.

You may notice it takes a lot of effort to formulate words and sentences. As a result, this can significantly impact your mental health and your willingness to connect with others. It’s common to experience the following with Broca’s aphasia:

Depending on what caused aphasia symptoms and the area of your brain where damage occurred, you may have additional symptoms beyond your speech. For example, after a stroke, you’re more likely to have trouble moving or paralysis on one side of your body. Stroke damage can also affect the muscles that control your arms and legs and you may have residual weakness.

What causes Broca’s aphasia?

Damage to the Broca’s area of your brain causes this type of aphasia. The Broca’s area is in your frontal lobe, on the left side of your head, near your temple. This part of your brain controls your speech and articulation.

The most common reason for damage to this part of your brain is an ischemic stroke.

Other possible causes include:

Diagnosis and Tests

How is Broca’s aphasia diagnosed?

A healthcare provider will diagnose this condition after a physical examneurological exam, language evaluation and testing. Your provider will review your health history during the exam. They may refer you to a speech-language pathologist (SLP) for a language evaluation. A speech-language pathologist will assess your ability to:

  • Name objects
  • Repeat phrases
  • Follow commands
  • Read
  • Write

Imaging tests can detect brain damage, which confirms a diagnosis. Your provider may order one of the following tests:

Since depression is common with aphasia, you may receive a referral to visit a mental health professional.

Management and Treatment

How is Broca’s aphasia treated?

Treatment for Broca’s aphasia varies based on what symptoms you experience.

Your healthcare provider will first recommend speech therapy. A speech-language pathologist will help you find effective ways to communicate. You may use a board with images on it and point to what you want or need. Your provider may teach you melodic intonation. This is where you learn to use musical tones (like singing) to express words or phrases more fluently than speaking.

Healthcare providers are studying new medications and treatment options for aphasia in clinical trials. These are tests on humans. Examples of available trials include transcranial stimulation and different types of medications.

If you experience mental health challenges with aphasia, your healthcare provider will recommend treatment options for depression, as well.

During treatment, your care team will work closely with your caregivers and loved ones so everyone can effectively communicate with each other. This can improve your outcome and quality of life.

Outlook / Prognosis

Can Broca’s aphasia be cured?

There isn’t a cure for Broca’s aphasia. Researchers are doing clinical trials to find new treatment options.

Can you recover from Broca’s aphasia?

Your ability to recover varies based on the severity of damage to the language processing area of your brain. Some cases may be temporary and you’ll make a full recovery, while others require lifelong management to help you communicate. You may notice language skill improvement within two to six months after a stroke. Speech therapy can help you maintain or increase these improvements over time.

Prevention

Can Broca’s aphasia be prevented?

You can’t prevent all cases of this condition. You can, however, reduce your risk of conditions that cause aphasia like a stroke or traumatic brain injury by:

  • Managing any underlying health conditions
  • Following an eating and physical activity plan that’s healthy for you
  • Protecting yourself from injury (like wearing a helmet during contact sports)

Your provider may make additional recommendations specific to your needs.

Living With

When should I see a healthcare provider?

Talk to a healthcare provider if you or a loved one have symptoms of aphasia, especially after a stroke or accident where you had head trauma. If you have an aphasia or neurodegenerative condition diagnosis and your symptoms get worse, let your provider know.

What questions should I ask my healthcare provider?

You may want to ask your provider:

  • What caused my symptoms?
  • How often should I participate in speech therapy?
  • Do I qualify for clinical trials?
  • Should I talk to a mental health professional?

A note from Cleveland Clinic

If you have Broca’s aphasia, you might want to speak, but the words don’t flow easily. This can feel like your brain built a wall around its language processing center. It takes a lot of mental effort just to put a sentence together. This can wear down your mental health and make you want to avoid social situations.

But you don’t have to deal with aphasia on your own. A healthcare provider can help you. You may learn new ways of speaking to adapt, like with an image board or a melody. These allow you to communicate your wants and needs more effectively. Practicing your newly learned skills can benefit your quality of life and your social interactions.

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Medically Reviewed.Last updated on 11/19/2024.

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Futurism: Anthropic Scared, Calls for Global Freeze on AI

Anthropic Scared, Calls for Global Freeze on AI Advances

We’ve heard this one before.

By Frank Landymore

Published Jun 5, 2026 3:48 PM EDT

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Anthropic is calling for a global “pause” on AI development, claiming that the technology is nearing a point where it can spiral out of human control. 

In a lengthy blog post published Thursday, the world’s most valuable AI startup made the case that its Claude family of models were on the path to achieving “recursive self-improvement,” or the ability to improve themselves on their own, a key hypothetical tipping point that could lead to the creation of powerful AIs capable of operating outside human interests and harming society.

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We’re not at that point yet, Anthropic stresses, but it “could come sooner than most institutions are prepared for.”

“We believe it would be good for the world to have the option to slow or temporarily pause frontier AI development to enable societal structures and alignment research to keep up with the advance of the technology,” the company wrote in the post.

It added that “a meaningful slowdown or pause would require multiple well-resourced labs at or near the frontier, in multiple countries, agreeing to stop under the same conditions,” and admitted that this would be challenging to enforce.

“Training runs are far easier to conceal than missile silos,” it wrote.

For Anthropic to call for a pause now is convenient. In the past few months, it leap-frogged OpenAI to become the world’s most valuable AI company with a $1 trillion valuation, and its models are now generally viewed as the best in the field, especially at coding tasks. If the industry were to hit the brakes now, it would cement Anthropic’s dominance.

Not everyone was buying Anthropic’s claims. Prominent AI critic Gary Marcus called the company’s lengthy post a “bait and switch.”

“Anthropic is trying to strike terror into everyone’s hearts (‘full recursive self-improvement also might increase the risks of humans losing control over AI systems’) but all they have really shown is just faster coding — entirely under human control,” Marcus wrote on his Substack. “A faster coding tool will probably not end the world.”

Anthropic has long tried to paint itself as the ethical and deeply concerned adult in the room. A cornerstone of its mythology is that CEO Dario Amodei abstained from unleashing a revolutionary AI model back in 2022 because he was too concerned about safety, and let OpenAI get all the glory when it released ChatGPT months later instead. 

Two months ago, in a rehashed sequel to this foundational company lore, Anthropic announced a new model called Mythos — but made a show of not releasing to the public, claiming it was powerful enough to break into “every major operating system and every major web browser.” 

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But its act is ringing hollower than ever. Earlier this year, Anthropic famously clashed with the Pentagon over concerns that its AI systems could be used in autonomous weaponry and in the mass surveillance of US citizens. Later, it emerged that Claude was being used to help select strike targets in Iran.

Amid its blowout with the military, Anthropic also dropped a safety pledge that was arguably the venture’s entire raison d’etre: to stop training an AI system if it couldn’t guarantee it had proper safety guardrails in place.

Further underscoring Anthropic’s hypocrisy, University College London professor Steven Murdoch cited recent reporting from the Financial Times revealing that Anthropic is helping the US National Security Agency use its Mythos model so it can wage cyberwarfare against potential enemies like China and Iran.

“Anthropic might give the impression of being warm and fuzzy, but their definition of AI safety is narrow,” Murdoch told The Guardian. “Supporting US authorities in the development of offensive capabilities has never been something they have spoken against.”

Regardless of whether Anthropic genuinely thinks it has a remotely realistic shot at pulling off a global pause — or if this is yet another ploy to boost its safety-minded image — it’s vowing to pursue further action.

“In the coming months, we will organize conversations where policymakers, researchers, civil society, and other AI companies can help answer some of the questions this piece raises, especially around full recursive self-improvement and how to create better options for coordination and deliberation,” the company wrote. “We’ll publish what comes out of it.” 

More on AI: CEO Says There Will Be No Raises Because He Spent All the Money on AI

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Frank Landymore

Contributing Writer

I’m a tech and science correspondent for Futurism, where I’m particularly interested in astrophysics, the business and ethics of artificial intelligence and automation, and the environment.

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Fortune: AI CEOs OpenAI, Anthropc and Microsoft … set aside their rivalry. Ask the question WHY?

AI CEOs from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Microsoft set aside their rivalry to warn Congress AI is making it too easy to design and create bioweapons

Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

By 

Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

Reporter

June 5, 2026, 4:14 AM ET

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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Anna Moneymaker—Getty Images

The CEOs of some of the biggest AI companies in the world have set aside their cutthroat competition to co-sign an open letter to Congress asking for more safeguards against a threat that their own technology has helped create. 

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Dario Amodei, Sam Altman, and Mustafa Suleyman—the CEOs of Anthropic, OpenAI, and  Microsoft AI, respectively—signed their names to a public letter to Congress urging the government to screen for the buying and selling of synthetic materials that could be used to create bioweapons. The letter, signed also by dozens of experts in the life sciences and national security fields, was organized by the conservative-leaning think tank, the Foundation for American Innovation, as well as the nonpartisan Institute for Progress.  

The letter specifically asks Congress to mandate screening for companies that are selling synthetic DNA and RNA, which the letter’s authors argue could be used to create bioweapons with the help of AI. Notably, some of the companies that manufacture these materials, like Twist Bioscience and Ansa Biotechnologies, also signed the letter, signaling that at least part of the industry welcomes the regulation.

“AI systems are improving rapidly, and alongside incredible benefits to science and medicine, there is a real possibility that the knowledge barriers which have historically prevented bad actors from obtaining biological weapons will meaningfully erode,” the letter read.

While companies selling synthetic DNA and RNA already do some screening voluntarily, the letter wants Congress to go further by making it legally required across the industry. The letter also urges Congress to require the companies that sell these synthetic materials to keep records on their orders, as well as the exact specifications of the materials sold, in an effort to help with potential biosecurity investigations.

The letter comes as improved AI models continue to spread to more people at global and exponential scale. A study by Stanford University from earlier this year found that generative AI tools reached 53% of the world’s population in just three years, faster than both the PC or the internet. At the same time, experts have found that publicly available AI models are able to provide information on how to create biological weapons and how to spread them, the New York Times reported earlier this month.

A silent threat

The government has long recognized the need to protect against deadly biological weapons. Biological agents are rarely used in terrorist attacks, and have accounted for just 0.02% of all historical attacks, according to a study in the peer-reviewed publication, The American Journal of Emergency Medicine. Yet, because they are often odorless, colorless, and in some cases highly contagious, they pose a distinct threat to Americans.  

Biological agents like Anthrax are especially deadly. When inhaled, Anthrax has a mortality rate of nearly 100% without treatment. In 2001, five people died and another 22 people were infected after a microbiologist and former employee of the Army’s biodefense laboratory mailed several Anthrax-laced letters addressed to two U.S. senators and several news outlets. The attacks, which came just after 9/11, spurred one of the largest FBI investigations ever. 

Some laws already exist to protect Americans against man-made biological threats. The Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989 made it illegal to develop or possess biological agents for use as a weapon, with a potential penalty of up to life in prison. After the anthrax attacks in 2001, the PATRIOT Act expanded on the 1989 law, making it easier to prosecute people in possession of dangerous biological agents even without explicit proof that they intended to build a weapon.

Congress has already made some progress on improving the safeguards around the selling of synthetic DNA and RNA. In February, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) introduced the Biosecurity Modernization and Innovation Act of 2026, with the goal of forcing sellers of these synthetic materials to screen both their orders and their customers while providing exemptions for “clearly non-hazardous and pose no credible threat to public health and safety.”

While the bill slowly moves its way through Congress, Josh Wentzel, a senior fellow at the Foundation for American Innovation, told Fortune that the letter was a good opportunity to show lawmakers that the AI industry and companies who sell synthetic DNA and RNA were equally concerned about the issue.

“This is bipartisan, concrete, achievable, and noncontroversial,” Wentzel said, adding he hopes now that Congress sees these parties are aligned, it can move forward with passing the Biosecurity Modernization and Innovation Act. “It’s a goal among many national security experts and, crucially, something the nucleic acid synthesis industry itself has called for.”

In 2001, Fortune first convened the smartest people we know, bringing together CEOs and founders, builders and investors, thinkers and doers. Since then, Fortune Brainstorm Tech has been the place where bold ideas collide. From June 8–10, we will return to Aspen—where it all began—to mark 25 years of Brainstorm. Register now.

About the Author

Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

By Marco Quiroz-GutierrezReporter

Role: Reporter
Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez is a reporter for Fortune covering general business news.

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Mint: Just reported: Epstein Survivors Testify LIVE “We were abused as Teens” PLEA LEAVES CONGRESS IN SHOCK

Streamed live on Jun 5, 2026 #EpsteinCase#JeffreyEpstein#CongressHearing

Multiple survivors of Jeffrey Epstein spoke before a U.S. House hearing, sharing emotional testimony about the abuse they suffered as teenagers and the failures of the justice system. Jenna Lisa Jones told lawmakers she was only 14 years old when the abuse began in Palm Beach and said it took years for her to find the courage to speak publicly. Another survivor, Dani Bensky, said she still lives with PTSD after being abused in 2004 and 2005 — years after earlier reports about Epstein had already been made to authorities. Survivors said a secret non-prosecution deal allowed Epstein to avoid harsher charges, arguing the government failed to inform victims and denied them justice. The testimony came as lawmakers continue to examine the broader network around Epstein and calls for greater accountability. #JeffreyEpstein#EpsteinHearing#EpsteinVictims#CongressHearing#JusticeForVictims#EpsteinCase#USPolitics#BreakingNews#USnewsMint is an Indian financial daily newspaper published by HT Media. The Mint YT Channel brings you cutting edge analysis of the latest business news and financial news. With in-depth market coverage, explainers and expert opinions, we break down and simplify business news for you. Click here to download the Mint App: https://livemint.onelink.me/MrDS/p0kx… Now make Mint your preferred source on Google and get business & finance updates first. Add here – https://www.google.com/preferences/so…

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Sciam: Edge.Org Be aware. Check it out … the Intellectual Elite in U.S. and funded by Epstein

January 20, 2026

8 min readGoogle LogoAdd Us On Google

Why did Jeffrey Epstein cultivate famous scientists?

The Epstein files revive questions of whether the disgraced financier sought to merely cultivate famous scientists, or to shape science itself

By Dan Vergano edited by Clara Moskowitz

A group of men and women seated and standing for a group photograph in front of a round pink table.
Jeffrey Epstein with professors at a dinner he hosted at Harvard University in September 2004. Rick Friedman/Alamy

Ethics

Last December, the U.S. Department of Justice released its first batch of files on disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Among the thousands of images was one video clip, the only one in the lot. It showed four seconds of the noted psychologist and writer Steven Pinker of Harvard University riding with Epstein on his now infamous private plane.

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It wasn’t a great flight even in 2002, years before Epstein’s first criminal conviction, Pinker says of the trip, which was heading to a TED Talk. “I immediately disliked Epstein and thought he was a dilettante and a smartass,” he says. Pinker has not been accused of wrongdoing in connection with Epstein.

Epstein, who died in federal prison in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, spent a lot of time talking to scientists. When more records are released from a reported stash of 5.2 million, now a month overdue, questions about what the “Epstein files” say about science and scientists are sure to arise. Already, e-mails dropped by a congressional committee and files released by the DOJ—thousands of notes, lists, videos and investigation records—have once again raised the question of why so many prominent scholars were involved with Epstein.

The financier widely courted punditspoliticians and billionaires, as the DOJ files confirm with photographs of everyone from Mick Jagger to Bill Clinton to Donald Trump appearing with him. (None are charged with wrongdoing in connection to the photographs.) A piano virtuosomysteriously wealthy and famously ingratiating, Epstein courted scientists for years, leading to investigations at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard, the results of which were made public in 2020. Last year’s e-mail releases revealed that astronomer Lawrence Krauss and linguist Noam Chomsky both associated with him long after his crimes became public knowledge. Last November Harvard launched a new investigation to look at connections between Epstein and economist Lawrence Summers, former president of the university.

Patronage

Money is one easy answer for why scientists were interested in Epstein. “Scientists need patronage; they need support,” says Bruce Lewenstein, a science communications expert at Cornell University. Wealthy patrons have funded scientists for centuries; they have paid for telescopes to investigate the atmospheres of alien worldsbrain mapping institutesmalaria prevention experiments, and much else. “That’s not good or bad; that’s what it is. And that has been true for 400 years,” Lewenstein says. Unlike many donors, Epstein usually wasn’t asking for his name on a building, and he donated money to everything from dance troupes to the Council on Foreign Relations, according to a 2019 Miami Herald report.

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Before his 2008 conviction for soliciting minors for prostitution, Epstein donated more than $9 million to Harvard, including a $6.5-million gift to Harvard’s Program for Evolutionary Dynamics (PED), led by mathematician Martin Nowak. (Epstein continued to visit that program after his conviction—he did so more than 40 times in 2018 aloneand kept an office there.) He was also a Visiting Fellow at the university in the 2005–2006 academic year, after making a $200,000 gift to its psychology department. Following his conviction, donors he introduced to Harvard scientists gave $9.5 million to the school.

Then there were Epstein’s donations to M.I.T.: he donated $525,000 to the MIT Media Lab and $225,000 to mechanical engineering professor Seth Lloyd. Both gifts came after his 2008 conviction and were handled outside normal channels, according to a university report. Epstein claimed to also have arranged another $7 million in donations from billionaires Bill Gates and Leon Black to the school (Gates denied this, and the university report says there’s no evidence of an effort to “launder” Epstein’s money in the donations).

“The only generalization is that scientists, like the universities they work for, together with artists and others in nonprofit ventures that depend on philanthropy, routinely cozy up to wealthy people willing to slosh money around,” Pinker says. “Very few of these donors are heinous psychopaths, and he exploited their gullibility.”

According to Pinker, his pre-TED Talk flight with Epstein came at the behest of his literary agent, John Brockman, whose Edge Foundation also threw salons for Epstein that BuzzFeed News described as an “exclusive intellectual boys club.” (Brockman and his organization did not respond to a request for comment, and no reports of wrongdoing attended the events.) Epstein funded that foundation, which threw parties for billionaires and made contacts with people such as Pinker for him. Those contacts paid off: despite his dislike for Epstein, Pinker unwittingly contributed to the financier’s legal defense. Pinker wrote a 2007 opinion on the semantics of the wording of a prostitution law as a favor for Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz, who was Epstein’s lawyer and had once taught a course with Pinker. Pinker has said he didn’t know the opinion was for Epstein’s defense.

“I was doing a professional courtesy to a colleague—it’s routine,” Pinker says. “If I knew at the time what we know now, I would not have agreed.”

A man standing in front of a chalkboard that is covered in equations.
Epstein in a Harvard classroom in September 2004.Rick Friedman/Alamy

Celebrity

So, legal opinions aside, what did Epstein want from science? The simplest explanation is that Epstein collected prominent people. His financial networking relied on creating an aura of wealth and influence to entice investors. He was a “people collector” who traded information and favors, said Barry Levine, one of his biographers, in a 2025 BBC report. Scientists might have just been one of many influential groups he cultivated at a time that was “a cultural high-water mark for scientists as celebrities,” says Declan Fahy, an associate professor of science communication at Dublin City University in Ireland and author of The New Celebrity Scientists. Scientists wrote best-selling books, appeared in Vanity Fair and Vogue and gave viral TED Talks that were elevated online. “They moved into the power elite,” Fahy says, and so made sense for Epstein to cultivate.

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According to Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s former girlfriend and majordomo, who was convicted in 2021 of sex trafficking, conspiracy and transportation of a minor for illegal sexual activity, Epstein was particularly fascinated by brain science. In a July 2025 interview Maxwell told the DOJ that connections she had made through her father, Robert Maxwell, founder of scientific publisher Pergamon Press, led to her introducing Epstein to the Santa Fe Institute, a home to many high-profile scientists. (Epstein donated $25,000 to the institute in 2010.) “Epstein would have dinners at the house that I was tasked to organize and the scientists were a very major component of that,” she said, according to the DOJ transcript.

The scientist and writer Evgeny Morozov attributed Epstein’s scientific connections to Brockman—the literary agent who, according to Pinker, talked the psychologist onto Epstein’s plane—in a 2019 article in the New Republic. Himself a former Brockman client, Morozov recounted the agent’s attempts to connect him to Epstein and his “billionaires’ dinners,” whose attendees often were TED Talk speakers—invitations that Morozov declined.

The Edge Foundation was ubiquitous in science writing circles from 1998 to 2018, annually publishing books on scientific topics. It was also connected to the physicist Lawrence Krauss, a former member of Scientific American’s board of advisers, who was removed following sexual misconduct allegations in 2018. Released e-mail records show that Krauss asked Epstein for advice on handling those charges. Krauss has denied the misconduct allegations against him; none of the communications cited allege wrongdoing in connection with Epstein. (In 2014 Epstein was even invited to two Scientific American editorial meetings, which he did not attend.) Public records suggest the Edge Foundation received $638,000 from Epstein from 2001 to 2015, making him its major funder.

Social Prosthetics

One disturbing explanation for Epstein’s support of science comes from his interest in genetic determinism. This idea, which dates to the eugenics era, is still fashionable in some wealthy circles and can be seen in companies now offering designer baby services for embryos of would-be parents. In 2019 the New York Times reported that Epstein had ambitions of founding a “baby ranch” to raise children of women he impregnated (not unlike “secret compound” plans reportedly shared by SpaceX and Tesla chief Elon Musk).

“Given this stance, it is particularly disturbing that he focused his largesse on research on the genetic basis of human behavior,” wrote Naomi Oreskes, a historian of science, in Scientific American in 2020. “Scientists might claim that Epstein’s money in no way caused them to lower their standards, but we have broad evidence that the interests of funders often influence the work done.” (Regarding Epstein, Oreskes now adds, “The continued press attention reminds us that—rightly or wrongly—we are judged by the company we keep, and some money is tainted.”)

Perhaps the only direct evidence of Epstein’s scientific ambitions comes from a proposal he made in 2005 to be a Visiting Fellow at Harvard. “I wish to study the reasons behind group behavior, such as ‘social prosthetic systems,’” he wrote in an application proposing magnetic resonance imaging studies on human volunteers. “That is, other people can act as ‘prosthetics’ insofar as they augment our cognitive abilities and help us to regulate our emotions—and thereby essentially serve as extensions of ourselves,” he added, with a scientific gloss neatly encapsulating his view of humanity’s role in his life. Harvard approved him twice for the fellowship, though a 2020 investigation later noted his utter lack of qualifications.

A Rocky Pedestal

One last question is why anyone is surprised that celebrity scientists fell into Epstein’s orbit—as opposed to, say, rock stars or politicians doing so—in a culture driven by the worship of wealth and celebrity.

“A bit of this is [because] we have created an idealized picture of scientists that doesn’t match reality,” Lewenstein says. Scientists themselves like being seen as experts with their status on a pedestal, he adds. “They are very reluctant to acknowledge the social forces that shape their science,” Lewenstein says.

In other words, money talks in science. For decades, pharmaceutical-industry-funded research, for example, has more often reported favorable results in medicine. And money can control what science projects don’t get done; social media companies such as Facebook and X (formerly Twitter) have shut out researchers from examining their data—a vast, barely regulated experiment on billions of people linked to worse mental health in children. At the National Institutes of Health right now, in a very different era for science than one of celebrity, Trump administration political appointees are approving or disapproving allocations of the agency’s $48-billion budget for investigations judged as worthy by actual scientists, overturning the post–World War II standards for funding research.

Most of the scientists supported by Epstein weren’t overtly political and supported a once-uncontroversial view of science as an engine of progress, Fahy says. Things are different now, “where public debate around science in the U.S.—particularly around climate and vaccination—has become sharper, divisive, intensely political,” he adds.

All that leaves Pinker unsure why his four seconds on the plane in 2002 was the only video in the Epstein files to be initially released by the Trump administration. One reason might be to generate news stories such as this one about scientists, he says. “The more that journalists write about other people in photos, the less attention Trump’s entanglement gets,” Pinker says.

Rights & Permissions

Dan Vergano is senior editor, Washington, D.C., at Scientific American. He has previously written for Grid News, BuzzFeed News, National Geographic and USA Today. He ischair of the New Horizons committee for the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing and a journalism award judge for both the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.

More by Dan Vergano

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The Nerve: The billionaires’ eugenics project: how Epstein infiltrated Harvard, muzzled the humanities and preached master-race science … Being aware is essential. Edge have you heard of this elite male dominated forum, well now is your opportunity. Open your eyes and thank the young women who tackled the likes of Epstein and the Rule of Law won; he died from suicide in prison while Ghislane Maxwell continues to serve her sentence.


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The billionaires’ eugenics project: how Epstein infiltrated Harvard, muzzled the humanities and preached master-race science

Edge – Jeffrey Epstein’s favourite intellectual salon – was sold to me as a gathering of the world’s finest minds, writes Virginia Heffernan. The files reveal it was something far darker: a decades-long project that cloaked eugenics, race science and sexual misconduct in Ivy League respectability

Virginia Heffernan

Virginia Heffernan

Feb 13, 2026

Graphic: John Brockman, Jeffrey Epstein and Harvard University, Massachusetts. Photos: Getty Images.

It’s alarming to see your name in the Epstein files, but I was braced to see mine. Years ago, I was part of a salon for intellectuals and pseudointellectuals called Edge founded by John Brockman. His mass emails evidently copied in Epstein and a dozen such email blasts made their way to the latest dump of hazmat. 

Brockman, my former agent for tech writing, told me Edge was an intellectual salon. Edge.org is indeed intriguingly sprawling, jammed with scholarly idols whose bios have “Booker” and “Nobel” in them. Members of Edge participated in conferences and symposia, and promoted each other’s work. Who was I to say no? Among Edge’s prodigious ranks were Ian McEwan, Yuval Noah Harari, Steve Wozniak, Richard Dawkins, Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Daniel Kahneman.

But if I’d read the member list more closely, I might have hesitated. Edge was overwhelmingly male, for one. It was said to be an intellectual salon, but in the club photos were tech bro billionaires, including Edge members Elon Musk, Bill Gates and Larry Page. And too many members were men now largely renowned for misconduct, professional or personal: Marc D Hauser, Jonah Lehrer, Lawrence Krauss, and Marvin Minsky

Turns out I didn’t have to worry about meeting these people. Brockman kept me at a distance. As the latest Epstein files reveal, the token female members of Edge were actively excluded from schmoozing and conferences, especially the glittering events known as the Billionaires’ Dinners. 

Good policy. Otherwise, we might have struck up conversations with the anxious-looking teenage girls kept out of the photos. We might have overheard the Edge men praising race science, rape culture and genetic engineering. We might even have asked where the money came from. Then we would have come face to face with the illiterate child rapist and passionate eugenicist who bankrolled the whole thing. Jeffrey Epstein.

Whatever Edge was supposed to be, it became something sinister. The salon played yenta to billionaire money and alpha-male minds, and together, over decades, they all converged on a master philosophy: they were apex predators ordained by nature to exploit and subjugate others. This creed allowed the Edge set to steer intellectual history into its current fascist dead-end. 

Jeffrey Epstein (2nd from left) at a dinner he hosted at Harvard, September 2004 with (l-r) professors Alan Dershowitz, Robert Trivers, Lawrence Summers (formerly Secretary of the Treasury and Harvard President) and Stephen Pinker. Photo: Rick Friedman / Alamy

Edge began in 1996, an online iteration of a club Brockman founded to promote technological ideas and oppose what he called the “sleepy wisdom” of the humanities. The 1990s and 2000s were a perfect time for Edge. The club gained momentum along with an avalanche of books that savaged political correctness, multiculturalism, and the “Obamacrats”. Several of these books were by men in the Edge circle and the Epstein files, including Palantir mastermind Peter Thiel, Trump’s crypto czar David O Sacks, and computer scientist David Gelernter. (Gelernter stopped teaching at Yale this month after his own lecherous emails with Epstein surfaced).  

Billionaires really like thinkers who see their exploitation of the weak as a good and natural thing

With its contempt for the humanities, Edge offered intellectually insecure reactionaries a pass. Without even opening a book, they could dismiss all of feminism, postcolonial theory and queer studies. They could continue to ignore giants like Edward Said, Judith Butler, and David Graeber, and devote their brains instead to the race science and rape apologetics that now pass for scholarship on edgelord podcasts.

It’s not clear when Epstein met Brockman, but by the late 90s he’d burrowed into Edge. With his cash infusions, Edge came to be known as home to far-right academics and the tech billionaires who love them. By 2000, Epstein was flying the Edge sausage party around on his planes, which served meals from Le Cirque and was appointed with mink throws.

Billionaires really like thinkers who see their exploitation of the weak as a good and natural thing. Epstein funnelled as much as $20m a year to academic men who shared his ideology. In exchange, Epstein himself, who could barely read and write, was empowered to hold forth in formal sessions at Harvard, condemning feeding and caring for the poor as if he were making a scholarly argument. 

The academics, in turn, liked the billionaire glitz. Middle-class rightwingers at Edge functions, including former New York Times columnist David Brooks and neuroscientist Sam Harris, now consorted with the likes of tech monopolists Jeff Bezos and Sergey Brin. 

In this atmosphere of warm brotherhood, how could they not have felt chosen to rule over the rest of us? One Edge member and Epstein consort, the anarchist Noam Chomsky, described this ethos: “The cool observers – meaning us smart guys – it’s our task to impose necessary illusions and emotionally potent oversimplifications to keep these poor simpletons on course.” 

Jeffrey Epstein and the late professor Marvin Minsky, September 2004. Photo: Rick Friedman / Corbis via Getty Images.

The men of prestige and ambition that Epstein especially liked to sugar-daddy at Edge were figures with a hand in the grim sophistry of evolutionary psychology. Among these were Edge darlings Martin Nowak, a “mathematical biologist”, and evolutionary biologist Robert Trivers. 

In an email in the recently released Epstein files, Nowak, whose Program for Evolutionary Dynamics (PED) at Harvard was founded with $6.5m from the child rapist, is asked “Did you torture her?” by Epstein. It’s not clear what Epstein is referring to. 

As for Trivers, his name appears in the Epstein files as part of an FBI report alleging that he sexually abused a 15-year-old girl in late 2019. (On the Edge site, Steven Pinker, a zealous Edge member, called Trivers “one of the great thinkers in the history of Western thought”.) 

Others in the Edge circle, including Charles Murray and Robert Kurzban, have long hammered away at what they consider universal constants: the inferiority of Black minds and the predisposition of men to violence and rape. (While Edge man Murray, a proud white supremacist, is still the right’s darling of free speech, Edge man Kurzban resigned his post at the University of Pennsylvania in 2018 after several alleged sexual relationships with undergraduates.) 

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In a classic of the just-asking-questions form perfected by rightwing trolls, Pinker pummelled the Edge audience in 2006 with these pressing inquiries: “Do most victims of sexual abuse suffer no lifelong damage? Did Native Americans engage in genocide and despoil the landscape? Do men have an innate tendency to rape?” And then, for good measure: “Is homosexuality the symptom of an infectious disease?”

And thus while he was peddling his vision for Edge as “a salon for the world’s finest minds”, its male members were preaching master-race ideology. Citing their work, Brockman predicted in 2005 that the “dangerous idea of the next decade” would be that “groups of people differ genetically in their average talents”. 

Surprise: white men, notably those of Ashkenazi descent like Epstein, have been “biologically selected for high intelligence”, according to the Edge site.

The intellectual groundwork was laid for Epstein to spring his world-domination plan on his kept Edge scholars. The big reveal: he hoped to seed the human race with his superior DNA by impregnating women at his ranch in New Mexico. 

Throughout the decades, according to The New York Times, Epstein talked up this ambition. He told at least one fellow eugenicist that he hoped to freeze his peerless brain and penis at his death, so his organs  could be revived for future use in “transhumanism”. He also generously funded the work of George Church, the Harvard geneticist and Edge superstar who developed a dating app to match people based on the fitness of their genes. Epstein’s friends enthusiastically discussed eugenics with him up till shortly before he died in prison. 

Screenshot from Edge.org website showing John Brockman, Steven Pinker, Daniel C Dennett, Katinka Matson and Richard Dawkins en route to TED in 2002. According to Yahoo Finance, an earlier picture caption, since altered, stated that they were travelling with Epstein.

What’s more, even as the NYT concludes that “there is no evidence that [Epstein’s plan] ever came to fruition”, this period in Epstein’s life is described contemporaneously by his teenage rape victims. One traumatised 16-year-old, whose diary surfaced in the most recent tranche of files, calls herself an “incubator” for Epstein’s offspring. She chronicles Epstein’s “Nazi”-like effort to create a “superior gene pool”. The fact that Sarah Ferguson, in a recently released email, congratulates Epstein on a “baby boy” has raised questions about where the DNA-seeding project stands now.

Other Epstein survivors, in the files and in court, have recounted hellish experiences of enslavement on the ranch, forced pregnancies, and bloody deliveries. In emails released by the justice department, Epstein is consulted dozens of times about pregnancies, sonograms, egg-freezing, and other obstetrical matters. 

Finally, there’s the long video interview that Epstein gave to Steve Bannon, the far-right Christian nationalist, which provides more context for Epstein’s obsession with eugenics. To start, Epstein blithely explains his racist worldview. “If I was in the forest and I had to run from the lion or figure out a way not to be eaten, and my competition is a local African, I’m the one who’s getting eaten … They have the intelligence to deal with their local environment.”

Epstein also tells Bannon that he helped fund the Santa Fe Institute, a New Mexico research operation, in part to advance his interest in “genetic algorithms”, which he can hardly describe. “Complex systems are complex, by definition,” he says. Epstein justifies his own manifest illiteracy by saying that people who know how to write can’t think broadly, unlike Socrates, Jesus, and himself.

“Genetic algorithms” are evidently systems theory crossed with race science. They “work” by “improving” chromosomes or their digital analogues using selection and mutation over several generations. Genetic algorithms are also described as “a metaheuristic inspired by the process of natural selection”.

I flashed back to the Edge crew’s relentless criticism of the humanities in the 1990s. In The Diversity Myth, Thiel and Sacks bitterly complained about “diversity” as jargon that concealed a nefarious political agenda. Well, now we have metaheuristical eugenics, and the jargon’s on the other foot. 

With the Epstein files, we’re confronted with exactly what all the Edge men – from Pinker to Dawkins to Musk to Gates – did with the intellectual territory they seized. With their Ivy League posts, their billions, and their blue-ribbon DNA, the would-be intellectuals in Epstein’s circle converged on nothing less than the ideology of Mein Kampf. The Edge dinners have ceased and the site is now dormant, but generations of young men trained at Harvard, LSE and Oxford absorbed the lesson — and generations of young women learned that their place in intellectual history is sidelined, exploited, or prone.

Virginia Heffernan in an American journalist and cultural critic who writes regularly for The New Republic. Her podcast and newsletter, Magic + Loss, can be found on Substack

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