❓Should we build a Causal Experts Network to connect you with other like-minded people in causality? ❗Share your thoughts in the survey: bit.ly/3RM8ziz
Really great interview on many levels. I especially liked the singing of מלאכי השלום towards the end. Many great work and life lessons. Alex, you are a great interviewer and very creative making is all better from this sort of knowledge mining.
Such an inspiring interview! I really loved the musical ending: what song was that? Also, who is the person mentioned by Judea who said that causality is ascientific, as you can follow the chain of causal links down to the big bang? Thanks!
Hi Carlo, I am glad you liked it! Thank you for sharing. The song is "Shalom Aleichem" -- a traditional 16th/17th century Jewish song that is traditionally sung on Shabbat evening. The person that called finding causes of effects the "cocktail party chatter" was Donald Rubin. Here's Alex Vasilescu's blog post that briefly discusses this story: www.aiacceleratorinstitute.com/causal-explanations-in-computer-graphics-computer-vision-and-machine-learning/
❓Should we build a Causal Experts Network to connect you with other like-minded people in causality?
❗Share your thoughts in the survey: bit.ly/3RM8ziz
He is so insightful 😮
Really great interview on many levels. I especially liked the singing of מלאכי השלום towards the end.
Many great work and life lessons.
Alex, you are a great interviewer and very creative making is all better from this sort of knowledge mining.
Thank you so much for putting this together. May we finally put the LLM discussion to rest 🙏
This is going to be amazing!!!!! ❤❤
Incredible to see this! Thank you judea pearl for your work and changing my career in analytics
Best episode ever!👍
Such an inspiring interview! I really loved the musical ending: what song was that? Also, who is the person mentioned by Judea who said that causality is ascientific, as you can follow the chain of causal links down to the big bang?
Thanks!
Hi Carlo,
I am glad you liked it! Thank you for sharing.
The song is "Shalom Aleichem" -- a traditional 16th/17th century Jewish song that is traditionally sung on Shabbat evening.
The person that called finding causes of effects the "cocktail party chatter" was Donald Rubin. Here's Alex Vasilescu's blog post that briefly discusses this story: www.aiacceleratorinstitute.com/causal-explanations-in-computer-graphics-computer-vision-and-machine-learning/
@@CausalPython thank you Aleksander for your reply!