As artificial intelligence systems grow more capable, a deeper question is beginning to surface across technology, enterprise, and policy circles: is AI evolving beyond intelligence toward awareness?
At the upcoming Machines Can Think Summit, this question will take center stage in a keynote by Joshua “Scotch” McClure, Founder, CEO, and Chairman of Maxwell Biosciences, and a partner of Tahaluf Al Emarat Technical Solutions.

Titled “From Intelligence to Awareness: The Next Layer in Enterprise AI,” McClure’s keynote will explore what comes after automation — and why the next phase of AI development may redefine how organizations, governments, and societies interact with intelligent systems.
Beyond Automation: A New Phase of AI Evolution
For the past decade, AI progress has largely focused on efficiency: faster models, better predictions, automated workflows, and scalable execution. But according to McClure, this framing is no longer sufficient.
As AI systems become more integrated into critical decision-making environments, the distinction between execution and contextual understanding begins to matter. The next frontier is not just smarter tools — but systems capable of operating with a form of situational awareness: understanding intent, consequences, and evolving conditions.
In his keynote, McClure will examine:
- What “awareness” means in the context of enterprise AI
- How intelligent systems evolve beyond task execution
- Why this shift changes risk, responsibility, and governance
- What enterprises and governments must prepare for as AI capabilities deepen
Rather than speculative futurism, the talk is grounded in real-world implications for deployment, oversight, and long-term strategy.
A Voice at the Intersection of AI, Biology, and Human Systems
Joshua “Scotch” McClure brings a rare multidisciplinary perspective to the AI conversation. A serial technology founder with more than 20 years of CEO experience, McClure is a multi-patent inventor and a pioneer working at the intersection of artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and human health.
Since founding Maxwell Biosciences in 2015, McClure has focused on building category-first technologies that challenge conventional assumptions about intelligent systems — particularly how AI can interact with complex biological and human-centered environments.
His work spans advanced AI architectures, biological modeling, and health-focused innovation, giving him a unique vantage point on how intelligence systems evolve when they are embedded in high-stakes, real-world contexts.
Why This Keynote Matters Now
As AI adoption accelerates globally, organizations are confronting new questions:
- How much autonomy should AI systems have?
- Where does human oversight begin and end?
- What happens when AI systems operate across domains that involve health, security, or public trust?
McClure’s keynote arrives at a moment when these questions are no longer theoretical. His session challenges audiences to rethink AI not just as a productivity tool, but as a systemic force whose next phase will demand new leadership, new safeguards, and new mental models.
A Defining Moment at Machines Can Think
Hosted in Abu Dhabi on January 26–27, 2026, Machines Can Think convenes global leaders across AI research, enterprise, infrastructure, policy, and investment to focus on real-world AI deployment and long-term impact.
McClure’s keynote is set to be one of the summit’s most thought-provoking sessions — pushing the audience to look beyond current capabilities and consider where intelligent systems are truly heading.
🚀 Be in the room for a conversation that challenges how we define intelligence itself.
📍 Machines Can Think Summit 2026
📅 January 26–27, 2026
📍 Abu Dhabi, UAE
