00:00Making connections in a divided world through the universal language of art and creativity.
00:09That's one of the key aims of Japan's Expo 2025.
00:13And in Learning and Playing Theme Week, we'll see just how important creativity is to acquiring knowledge
00:20and what the future of learning could look like in an AI-powered world.
00:30Media artist Yoshi Ochiai, who designed the mind-bending, mirrored Null Null Pavilion,
00:39led a panel about how AI and other technologies are changing education and reshaping how we learn.
00:48When you try to learn something new and you rely only on AI,
00:51then maybe you will get like a wrong information that you will remember the thing wrong
00:56because AI model hallucinate all the time.
01:00Something that AI creates is kind of normal, like a mediocre,
01:03but yeah, for a human, we have like a creativity that I don't think AI can beat us.
01:11Musician, mathematician and champion of STEAM education,
01:15Sachiko Nakajima is behind the Invigorating Lives, Playground of Life Jellyfish Pavilion,
01:21where she says people can experience the joy and possibility of creativity.
01:26A characteristic she too believes won't be replaced by AI.
01:31I'm not afraid at all because for me, AI is like a friend.
01:37So when you meet with somebody who are different from me, it's so interesting and inspiring.
01:43So AI is another existence.
01:46So we have to learn how to co-live together with AI.
01:51Inclusion was at the heart of this event, focusing on harnessing the strengths of diversity.
01:58Everyone is different and we believe that everyone is minority, so actually.
02:04So we have some kind of unique characteristics.
02:07We like to treasure those kind of diversified personalities or characteristics of everyone.
02:12Creativity and art can be powerful tools to connect people in a divided world.
02:22Chilean filmmaker Maite Alberti was among the guests discussing how they can bridge gaps in society.
02:29She says cinema breaks down barriers.
02:31I think that with intimate and personal stories, that's what films do, especially, like to break the stereotypes and the prejudge.
02:49Elderly, it's also a prejudge.
02:53I made my last two films about elderly people, but I can do 100 different films about elderly people, and I will have 100 different stories.
03:06Overcoming prejudice and unconscious bias are also some of the central themes of peace, human security and dignity theme week.
03:15Biases and prejudice are sort of silent architects of conflict.
03:21But if those things are unaddressed, a huge amount of frustration, difficulties, injustices spread in different parts of the society,
03:33and that actually becomes one of the key root causes, if you will, of conflict today.
03:39And it is very important that today's young people are part of these discussions.
03:44They will be the one inheriting today's world, and more than that, they will be the one who will be building future peace.
03:58And on August 6th, Hiroshima Peace Memorial Day, children from Japan and around the world presented the peace communication declaration,
04:07ensuring the Expo's message of tolerance lives on in the next generation.
04:11My hope for the future is that this world will have no more fights like war, like atomic bomb.
04:36I hope that there should be no more World War III, and the world should be at peace.
04:42Well, that's all we've got time for in this program.
04:44For more creative ideas for the future from Expo 2025, check out euronews.com.
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