
隨著人工智能威脅顛覆勞動力市場,各行各業的從業者(從Z世代到嬰兒潮一代)都探尋適應未來職場的方法。誰能在這場變革中脫穎而出?Palantir首席執行官亞歷克斯·卡普給出了極為凝練的答案。
“從根本上說,只有兩條路能讓你在未來站穩腳跟,”這位58歲的億萬富豪本月早些時候在《TBPN》直播節目中表示,“一是接受過某種職業培訓,二是屬于神經多樣性人群。”
卡普所說的第一類人,恰恰印證了當下的共識:從電工到水管工的技能型才難以被自動化取代。隨著大型科技公司建設龐大的數據中心,疊加美國本土勞動力短缺現狀,這類人才的需求正持續攀升。
第二類人群則更個性化。卡普長期公開談論自己患有閱讀障礙癥,這種學習障礙可能影響閱讀、寫作和信息處理能力。從更廣的范疇看,神經多樣性還包括注意力缺陷多動障礙(ADHD)和自閉癥等狀況。
在卡普看來,這種認知差異在人工智能驅動的世界中可能成為一種優勢——與其說是因為診斷結果本身,不如說是因為它所塑造的思維模式。他認為,成功會青睞那些思維方式獨特、敢于冒險的人,用他的話來說,是那些“更具藝術家特質,能從不同視角看待事物,并能創造出獨特成果”的人。
高德納(Gartner)的一項研究顯示,到2027年,將有五分之一的《財富》美國500強企業銷售部門積極招聘神經多樣性人才,以提升業務表現。
Palantir押注神經多樣性人才和高中畢業生
盡管神經多樣性并非入職Palantir的硬性條件,但該公司已明確將此類求職者視為戰略優勢。
該公司專門設立了“神經多樣性人才專項計劃”,旨在招募思維方式不同于與傳統員工的優秀人才。
該招聘啟事寫道:“神經多樣性人群將在塑造美國及西方世界未來中發揮超乎尋常的作用。他們能看穿表面話術,洞察世界猶存之美,而科技與藝術恰能揭示這份美好。”
這種用人導向也反映出卡普對傳統職業發展路徑的質疑。盡管他本人擁有三個高等學位——包括斯坦福大學法學博士學位和德國歌德大學的哲學博士學位,但他仍直言不諱地指出,在人工智能驅動的經濟中,高等教育存在局限性。
今年早些時候,卡普在瑞士達沃斯舉辦的世界經濟論壇年會上表示:“[人工智能]將摧毀人文社科領域的工作。你進入名校、攻讀哲學專業——以我為例——最好還是掌握其他技能,否則,僅憑這一專業,你很難謀生。”
Palantir還推出了另一項專項計劃——“菁英獎學金計劃”,專門面向未升入大學的高中畢業生。該項目首期申請者的考試成績需達到常春藤盟校成績要求,吸引了超過500名申請者。據《華爾街日報》報道,最終錄取的22名學生中,有的認為傳統大學教育缺乏吸引力,有的未能進入理想院校。
目前該項目正在招募第二期學員(2026年秋季入學),為參與者提供每月5400美元津貼,其宣傳語清晰明了:“告別負債,奪回屬于你的人生,獲得Palantir學位”——表現優異者甚至能獲得公司的全職錄用機會。
面向Z世代的初級崗位持續縮減,但并非所有人都放棄上大學
隨著面向Z世代畢業生的傳統初級崗位持續縮減,許多年輕人得出了與卡普相似的結論:大學文憑已不再是成功的保障。
即便如此,仍有部分科技行業領袖認為,高等教育遠未過時,尤其是在人工智能時代,人文社科專業可能變得更有價值。微軟首席科學家杰亞米·蒂凡(Jaime Teevan)認為,下一代人將從聚焦思維方式的學科中獲益更多,而非那些僅關注操作方法的學科。
“元認知能力將變得至關重要——靈活性、適應性、實驗精神、批判性思維、敢于質疑的能力。培養批判性思維需要經歷磨礪、挑戰困難任務、進行深度思考。”她在接受《華爾街日報》采訪時表示,“在這方面,傳統的人文社科教育至關重要。”
與卡普的觀點形成鮮明對比的是,人工智能公司Anthropic聯合創始人丹妮拉·阿莫迪(Daniela Amodei)表示,學習人文社科將“比以往任何時候都更加重要”。
“體現人類獨特性的特質將日益凸顯其重要性,而非趨于弱化。”她上個月在接受美國廣播公司新聞(ABC News)采訪時表示,“我的意思是,如今我們招聘時,更看重求職者的情商、溝通能力和人際交往能力,以及善良、同理心、好奇心和樂于助人的品質。”(財富中文網)
譯者:中慧言-王芳
隨著人工智能威脅顛覆勞動力市場,各行各業的從業者(從Z世代到嬰兒潮一代)都探尋適應未來職場的方法。誰能在這場變革中脫穎而出?Palantir首席執行官亞歷克斯·卡普給出了極為凝練的答案。
“從根本上說,只有兩條路能讓你在未來站穩腳跟,”這位58歲的億萬富豪本月早些時候在《TBPN》直播節目中表示,“一是接受過某種職業培訓,二是屬于神經多樣性人群。”
卡普所說的第一類人,恰恰印證了當下的共識:從電工到水管工的技能型才難以被自動化取代。隨著大型科技公司建設龐大的數據中心,疊加美國本土勞動力短缺現狀,這類人才的需求正持續攀升。
第二類人群則更個性化。卡普長期公開談論自己患有閱讀障礙癥,這種學習障礙可能影響閱讀、寫作和信息處理能力。從更廣的范疇看,神經多樣性還包括注意力缺陷多動障礙(ADHD)和自閉癥等狀況。
在卡普看來,這種認知差異在人工智能驅動的世界中可能成為一種優勢——與其說是因為診斷結果本身,不如說是因為它所塑造的思維模式。他認為,成功會青睞那些思維方式獨特、敢于冒險的人,用他的話來說,是那些“更具藝術家特質,能從不同視角看待事物,并能創造出獨特成果”的人。
高德納(Gartner)的一項研究顯示,到2027年,將有五分之一的《財富》美國500強企業銷售部門積極招聘神經多樣性人才,以提升業務表現。
Palantir押注神經多樣性人才和高中畢業生
盡管神經多樣性并非入職Palantir的硬性條件,但該公司已明確將此類求職者視為戰略優勢。
該公司專門設立了“神經多樣性人才專項計劃”,旨在招募思維方式不同于與傳統員工的優秀人才。
該招聘啟事寫道:“神經多樣性人群將在塑造美國及西方世界未來中發揮超乎尋常的作用。他們能看穿表面話術,洞察世界猶存之美,而科技與藝術恰能揭示這份美好。”
這種用人導向也反映出卡普對傳統職業發展路徑的質疑。盡管他本人擁有三個高等學位——包括斯坦福大學法學博士學位和德國歌德大學的哲學博士學位,但他仍直言不諱地指出,在人工智能驅動的經濟中,高等教育存在局限性。
今年早些時候,卡普在瑞士達沃斯舉辦的世界經濟論壇年會上表示:“[人工智能]將摧毀人文社科領域的工作。你進入名校、攻讀哲學專業——以我為例——最好還是掌握其他技能,否則,僅憑這一專業,你很難謀生。”
Palantir還推出了另一項專項計劃——“菁英獎學金計劃”,專門面向未升入大學的高中畢業生。該項目首期申請者的考試成績需達到常春藤盟校成績要求,吸引了超過500名申請者。據《華爾街日報》報道,最終錄取的22名學生中,有的認為傳統大學教育缺乏吸引力,有的未能進入理想院校。
目前該項目正在招募第二期學員(2026年秋季入學),為參與者提供每月5400美元津貼,其宣傳語清晰明了:“告別負債,奪回屬于你的人生,獲得Palantir學位”——表現優異者甚至能獲得公司的全職錄用機會。
面向Z世代的初級崗位持續縮減,但并非所有人都放棄上大學
隨著面向Z世代畢業生的傳統初級崗位持續縮減,許多年輕人得出了與卡普相似的結論:大學文憑已不再是成功的保障。
即便如此,仍有部分科技行業領袖認為,高等教育遠未過時,尤其是在人工智能時代,人文社科專業可能變得更有價值。微軟首席科學家杰亞米·蒂凡(Jaime Teevan)認為,下一代人將從聚焦思維方式的學科中獲益更多,而非那些僅關注操作方法的學科。
“元認知能力將變得至關重要——靈活性、適應性、實驗精神、批判性思維、敢于質疑的能力。培養批判性思維需要經歷磨礪、挑戰困難任務、進行深度思考。”她在接受《華爾街日報》采訪時表示,“在這方面,傳統的人文社科教育至關重要。”
與卡普的觀點形成鮮明對比的是,人工智能公司Anthropic聯合創始人丹妮拉·阿莫迪(Daniela Amodei)表示,學習人文社科將“比以往任何時候都更加重要”。
“體現人類獨特性的特質將日益凸顯其重要性,而非趨于弱化。”她上個月在接受美國廣播公司新聞(ABC News)采訪時表示,“我的意思是,如今我們招聘時,更看重求職者的情商、溝通能力和人際交往能力,以及善良、同理心、好奇心和樂于助人的品質。”(財富中文網)
譯者:中慧言-王芳
From Gen Z to baby boomers, workers across industries are on the hunt for ways to future-proof their careers as artificial intelligence threatens to upend the labor market. Palantir CEO Alex Karp is offering a starkly simple view of who will come out ahead.
“There are basically two ways to know you have a future,” the 58-year-old billionaire said on TBPN earlier this month. “One, you have some vocational training. Or two, you’re neurodivergent.”
Karp’s first category reflects a growing consensus: skilled trades professionals—from electricians to plumbers—are difficult to automate and are increasingly in demand as Big Tech companies build out massive data centers and the U.S. faces existing labor shortages.
The second category is more personal. Karp has long spoken about living with dyslexia, the learning disability that can affect reading, writing, and information processing. More broadly, neurodivergence can include conditions such as ADHD and autism.
For Karp, that cognitive difference can be an advantage in an AI-driven world—less because of the diagnosis itself and more because of the mindset it can foster. Success, he argued, will favor people who think differently and take risks, or in his words, be “more of an artist, look at things from a different direction, be able to build something unique.”
One-fifth of sales organizations within Fortune 500 companies are expected to actively recruit neurodivergent talent to improve business performance by 2027, according to a Gartner study.
As Alex Karp warns AI will wipe out jobs, Palantir is betting on neurodivergent talent and high school grads
While being neurodivergent is not a requirement to land a job at Palantir, the company has made it clear it sees such candidates as a strategic advantage.
It offers a dedicated “Neurodivergent Fellowship,” aimed at recruiting talent that may think differently from traditional hires.
“Neurodivergent individuals will play a disproportionate role in shaping the future of America and the West,” the job posting stated. “They see past performative ideologies and perceive beauty in the world that still exists—which technology and art can expose.”
The emphasis reflects Karp’s broader skepticism of traditional career pathways. Despite holding three degrees to his name—including a JD from Stanford and a PhD in philosophy from Goethe University in Germany—Karp has been blunt about the limits of higher education in an AI-driven economy.
“[AI] will destroy humanities jobs,” Karp said at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland earlier this year. “You went to an elite school, and you studied philosophy—I’ll use myself as an example—hopefully, you have some other skill, that one is going to be hard to market.”
Palantir similarly launched a separate program—the Meritocracy Fellowship—designed specifically for high school graduates not enrolled in college. The program’s first cohort required Ivy League-level test scores to qualify, and attracted over 500 applicants. The 22 admitted students were a mix of those who felt attending college wasn’t compelling, or didn’t get into their dream schools, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The next round, currently recruiting for fall 2026, offers participants $5,400 a month as a stipend and pitches itself with a clear message: “Skip the debt. Reclaim years of your life. Earn the Palantir degree”—and top performers can even receive full-time offers at the company.
Entry-level roles for Gen Z are drying—but not everyone has given up on college
As traditional entry-level roles dry up for Gen Z graduates, many young people are coming to a similar conclusion as Karp: a college degree alone is no longer a guaranteed path to success.
Still, some tech leaders argue that higher education is far from obsolete—and that liberal arts in particular may become more valuable in the age of AI. Jaime Teevan, Microsoft’s chief scientist, believes the next generation will benefit from studying disciplines that emphasize how to think, not just what to do.
“Metacognitive skills will be very important—flexibility, adaptability, experimentation, thinking critically, being able to challenge things. Developing critical-thinking skills requires friction, doing things that are hard, doing deep thinking,” she told The Wall Street Journal. “For that, a traditional liberal-arts education is really important.”
In direct contrast to Karp, Daniela Amodei, cofounder of AI firm Anthropic, said studying the humanities will be “more important than ever.”
“The things that make us human will become much more important instead of much less important,” she told ABC News last month. “And what I mean by that is when we look to hire people at Anthropic today, we look for people who are great communicators, who have excellent EQ and people skills, who are kind and compassionate and curious and want to help other people.”