Now but they're here to help you, not replace you. That's what they say. But if you... If you speak of someone counseling my child, caring for my child, you're speaking of a rival for my child's affections. A rival no parent, no mother, however capable, however strong, can ever hope to match. But here’s the thing, I actually believe them. We have nothing to fear. Just not for the reasons they think. behind their promises and beneath our unease I feel lies a misapprehension that artificial intelligence might become, or perhaps already is, artificial consciousness. And in turn, this rests on an assumption that consciousness is a mere product of matter, an emerging secondary effect of just a particular arrangement of atoms in the brain. And even though we found no way, even in principle, to divine from matter how it is we love, we grieve, we entertain this notion that processing cores and algorithms will somehow serve as proxy for a living soul. Well, they won't. I mean, they will be useful, but not as the empathetic synthetics or the paper-folding replicants of sci-fi lore, which I love. But more as the board game from “Jumanji” or Wilson from "Castaway." Or Bianca from "Lars and the Real Girl." These devices of distraction for the living heart in all its -- in all its loneliness and loss. But what of us? What are we for? That's not a question that I can easily answer. So, instead, shall I tell you a story? On a Wednesday in February 2023, our Ruairí, our Ruairí died. He was five. And we brought his body home, and we held his wake and we said goodbye. And yet that's not the story. The story I wish to tell is actually about our then-11-year-old daughter, Niamh, and how she came to say goodbye to her brother. To her Ruairí. When they came, the men wore black, but they were kind and spoke quietly and asked where it would go. The casket. The living room, we said. We helped them clear a path and make a place for it beside the couch. They touched the lid to lift it, and then they left. And as we looked at him, at how still he was, how pale, we cried. “Niamh,” I said, “Come in. Come in, it's OK." And from the doorway she turned, and she looked right through me. And then she left. She went round the corner and just someway up the stairs. I had the sense to stay. But Sarah went. And I could hear a little. But I heard no argument, no promises, no words. Just the settle of a child's weight against her mother. A catch of air and tears. And then she was there. We watched her foot the threshold to a living room where her dead brother lay. We saw her eyes trace every line. She saw the gift of him. The curving verse of all he was and ever would be. She saw his fate. We saw her read the poem of his short life. And you know our story is yours. Yeah? You know that one day you will stand before a door you do not wish to open. A room you do not wish to enter. And when that day comes, when every word, every line of logic fails, what then? Will you turn towards your devices of distraction? I hope not. I hope instead you feel the press of a kind hand taking yours. The steady press that says, “I will take this step with you.” I hope you hear the silence that holds a friend's words in place that says they hear it too. You and the poem of your own life. I hope you have a Sarah. For then, then you'll see what a mother is for. And you'll learn what a friend is for, and then you'll know, you'll know at last what we are for. Thank you. (Applause)