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Description

Garry Kasparov knows what it means to play at the edge of human potential. In this episode of Strange Loop, the legendary chess champion and human rights advocate joins Sana founder and CEO Joel Hellermark to explore how chess became the proving ground for AI, why intuition and creativity still matter, and what happens as machines begin to outpace their creators.

Together, they dive into the psychological drama of elite competition, the dangers and opportunities of AI in the real world, and the lessons chess offers for the future of knowledge, work, and human agency.

What’s in this episode

Transcript: https://sanalabs.com/strange-loop/garry-kasparov

About Strange Loop

Strange Loop is a podcast about how artificial intelligence is reshaping the systems we live and work in. Each episode features deep, unscripted conversations with thinkers and builders reimagining intelligence, leadership, and the architectures of progress. The goal is not just to follow AI’s trajectory, but to question the assumptions guiding it.

Subscribe for more conversations at the edge of AI and human knowledge.

Timestamps

(00:00) Why chess became AI’s proving ground

(04:22) Competing against machines—and the end of an era

(09:18) Lessons from defeat, and reinvention beyond the board

(15:10) The geopolitics of AI and the risk of misuse

(22:35) Human strengths: intuition, adaptation, and meaning

(28:40) Progress, risk, and the meaning of life

(34:20) What comes next for human agency in the AI age

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Where to find Garry

Where to find Joel