The boom in Arrtificial Intelligence ("AI") and its expansion into professional and personal life confirms the prescience and lucididty of J. Krishnamurti's 1981 inquiry relating to the computer's impact on humanity. Will we continue to rely on a culture of fear, illusion, compulsion, acquistion, clinging, addiction, separation and distraction? Or, will we learn to pay attention to our personal and collective suffering, confusion, contradictions, disorder, conflict, judgment, comparison and interior life? Will social media, phones and screens be more important than ourselves? Will we lose our autonomy and devolve in to even more mechanistic behaviours and ways of living? Will our creativity be replaced by machines? Will we become delusional and ignorant dullards as a result of endlessly distracting ourselves? Will cognition, critical thinking, analysis and attention decline even more than they have in the age of social media and algorithmic bubbles? Or can A.I. and automation provide us with the opportunity to look into ourselves more deeply to discover who we really are? Can we discover the meaning of love, compassion, joy, beauty, understanding, and the courage to bring an ending to fear and confusion?