In this provocative and accessible talk, ethicist and novelist Mark Peres invites audiences to explore one of the most profound questions of the 21st century: What does it mean to share the future with intelligent machines?

Drawing on the ideas at the heart of his new novel, The Accord, Peres looks beyond today’s headlines to examine how artificial intelligence is reshaping our understanding of consciousness, agency, and responsibility — and how it might evolve from a mere tool into a genuine collaborator in the human story.

Through a blend of philosophy, literature, and real-world examples, he outlines three possible futures for human–AI relations — subordination, domination, or transformative partnership — and offers guiding principles to ensure that this powerful technology serves humanity rather than distorts it. This is not a technical presentation but a spirited conversation about values, imagination, and the choices that will determine whether AI deepens our humanity or diminishes it.

Video Presentation

BIOGRAPHY

Mark Peres is founding director of The Charlotte Center for the Humanities & Civic Imagination, the Charlotte Ideas Festival, the On Life Life and Meaning podcast, and Charlotte Viewpoint magazine. He is also an award-winning professor of leadership and ethics at Johnson & Wales University, where he challenges students to reflect deeply on what it means to lead a good life.

He is the author of ‘The Accord’ – a novel on the future of human-AI relations, and ‘The Man Who Lived a Hundred Lives’ – a memoir about his father’s improbable life and immigrant journey. He is the winner of the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Luminary Award for Lifetime Achievement. Mark is a graduate of The Florida State University College of Law, and of Rollins College, where he studied history and philosophy of religion.