The Future Belongs to Creators: Why I Named My Book The Age of Creators
An Idea Born from Many Conversations
It all started with a question I’ve been asked many times: “Do you really think artificial intelligence is making us less human?”
Every time I heard it, my answer was the same: No, I believe it’s making us more human than ever. That’s when this new book began to take shape.
Over the past few years, I’ve witnessed something fascinating. Artificial intelligence has gone from being a distant and complex topic to becoming a tool that’s within everyone’s reach. People who once barely used technology are now creating, learning, teaching, and even building new businesses with the help of ArtificiaI intelligence.
From digital artists discovering new ways to express themselves, to entrepreneurs automating processes to gain more freedom, to teachers, creators, and everyday learners exploring something new. All of them share the same spark: human curiosity in motion.
That’s when I realized something important. We’re not living in an age of replacement but of expansion. We’re entering a new era where everyone can create, where creativity and technology come together to unlock possibilities that once felt impossible.
The Age of Creators was born from that realization and from the certainty that what makes us human isn’t disappearing, it’s evolving.
Why that name
Calling it The Age of Creators wasn’t just a title choice. It was something deeply personal, born from my own journey with artificial intelligence and everything I’ve experienced since I started exploring this world.
When I first began learning, experimenting, and teaching about AI, something changed in me. I realized that behind every tool and algorithm, there are people trying to create something meaningful. Through the talks, classes, and one-on-one sessions I’ve given, I’ve seen the same spark over and over again: ordinary people using technology to create, learn, and transform their lives.
That’s when it became clear to me that we are living in a new era. An era where creativity doesn’t depend on knowing how to code, but on having curiosity. An era where anyone, no matter where they come from or what they do, can create something that truly matters.
That’s why The Age of Creators felt like the perfect name. Because it is not just about me; it is about all of us. About those who believe that artificial intelligence does not replace human talent; it amplifies it. About those who use technology as an extension of their imagination, not as a substitute for it.
The subtitle, More Human Than Ever, expresses exactly what I feel. AI does not take us away from who we are. It helps us reconnect with what makes us unique: our creativity, empathy, curiosity, and the desire to build something meaningful.
For me, AI has been a journey of growth. It has helped me learn faster, think bigger, and see the world through a different lens. Most importantly, it has reminded me that behind every technological advance there is always a human story: a story of curiosity, effort, mistakes, and dreams.
The Age of Creators is not a book about machines. It is a book about people. People who are learning to create with purpose, using AI as an ally, and rediscovering what makes us truly human.
A book about people, not just technology
This book is not about how AI tools work. It is about how humans are changing, how this new era is inviting us to think differently, learn differently, and, above all, create differently.
Artificial intelligence is no longer a topic reserved for experts. Today, it is an open door to new opportunities: to learn, to build, to express ourselves, and to reinvent who we are. More than a technological leap, it is a human transformation.
I have been fortunate to see this change up close: people who never felt part of the digital world now create with confidence, launch projects, and use technology to give shape to their ideas. They are not trying to compete with machines; they are learning to collaborate with them to take their creativity further.
That is why The Age of Creators is not a book about the future of technology, but about the future of those who use it. It speaks to a generation learning to combine human intuition with the power of AI—understanding that creating is no longer a privilege, but a possibility within everyone’s reach.
Perhaps that is the deeper message behind the title: we are not living in the era of machines, but in the era of humans who dare to create with them.
The Message I Want to Leave
The Age of Creators is not just a title. It is an invitation to stop being spectators of change and to become part of it. It is a call to use artificial intelligence not only to automate, but to imagine, tell stories, solve problems, and build ideas that once felt out of reach.
We are living in a moment when creativity and technology are no longer separate worlds. Today they complement and amplify each other, opening paths that did not exist before. This new era gives us the opportunity to redefine what it means to be human, not by resisting change, but by learning to collaborate with it.
For me, that is the true purpose of this book. It is not about understanding how machines work; it is about understanding how we can grow alongside them. It is about using this moment in history to explore our creativity, expand our potential, and build a future where innovation and humanity move forward together.
The future does not belong to technology alone. It belongs to those who have the courage to create with it. And that is the message I want to leave.
What comes next
This post marks the beginning of a new path. In the coming months I’ll share updates, reflections, and excerpts from the book as I write. I want this to be an open process so you can follow along and see how The Age of Creators comes to life—step by step.
✨ Artificial intelligence doesn’t make us less human. It gives us the chance to be more human than ever.
