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{{Def|Magic||n|{{image|Paul Daniels|jpg|Just to manage your expectations, you aren’t going to like this a lot.}}}}{{quote|An art of converting superstition into coin. There are other arts serving the same high purpose, but the discreet lexicographer does not name them.
{{Def|Magic||n|{{image|Paul Daniels|jpg|Just to manage your expectations, you aren’t going to like this a lot.}}}}{{quote|An art of converting superstition into coin. There are other arts serving the same high purpose, but the discreet lexicographer does not name them.
:— {{author|Ambrose Bierce}}, {{br|The Devil’s Dictionary}}}}
:—{{author|Ambrose Bierce}}, {{br|The Devil’s Dictionary}}}}
{{Quote|{{ACC on technology}}}}
{{Quote|{{ACC on technology}}}}
{{Quote|{{JC on technology}}}}
{{Quote|{{JC on technology}}}}
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*[[Technological unemployment]]
*[[Technological unemployment]]
*[[Reg tech]]
*[[Reg tech]]
*[[ChatGPT-3]]

Revision as of 18:50, 25 January 2023

The Jolly Contrarian’s Dictionary
The snippy guide to financial services lingo.™
Just to manage your expectations, you aren’t going to like this a lot.

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Magic (n.)

An art of converting superstition into coin. There are other arts serving the same high purpose, but the discreet lexicographer does not name them.

Ambrose Bierce, The Devil’s Dictionary

“Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”

Arthur C. Clarke’s third law

“Any sufficiently primitive middle manager will be unable to distinguish a basic chatbot from magic.”

JC’s sixth law of worker entropy

Not artificial intelligence, machine learning or natural language processing, however much they might seem like it to primitive or unimaginative minds. Another kind of NLP — neuro-linguistic programming — may be, at least in the hands of Derren Brown, though I suspect a bit of amateur dramatics and camera trickery going on there too.

See also