
'Education is not an event, you can learn forever,' says Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas: Lessons every student can learn from him
The bid, more than twice Perplexity's own $14 billion valuation, has electrified debate across boardrooms, investment circles, and policy chambers. For some, it is a daring gesture of ambition; for others, a symbolic move timed to exploit Google's vulnerability in the wake of a landmark antitrust ruling in the United States. Whatever the outcome, it has catapulted Srinivas into the rarefied company of visionaries who are bold enough to challenge the very foundations of the internet.
The Oxford Union address: A lesson in
lifelong learning
Srinivas took the stage at the Oxford Union, a venue steeped in intellectual tradition, to speak not about billion-dollar valuations or takeover battles, but about the philosophy that underpins his success. He told students,
'Education is not an event. You can choose to stop, or you can choose to learn forever.'
The words, simple yet profound, resonated deeply within the hall. They offered a counterpoint to the transactional view of education as a checklist of degrees and certifications.
For Srinivas, learning is not a milestone; it is a continuum, a lifelong pursuit that refuses to be confined by classrooms or timetables.
From Chennai to California: A journey forged in curiosity
Srinivas's conviction is not theoretical. Born in Chennai in 1994, he excelled at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras, where he earned dual degrees in electrical engineering. His intellectual restlessness soon took him to the University of California, Berkeley, where under the mentorship of Pieter Abbeel, one of the most influential figures in AI, he pursued a doctorate on representation learning for perception and control.
Even before completing his Ph.D. in 2021, Srinivas had already worked at Google Brain, DeepMind, and OpenAI, immersing himself in the frontlines of artificial intelligence research. These formative years cemented his understanding of how algorithms, data, and human curiosity converge to shape the technologies of tomorrow.
In 2022, alongside Denis Yarats, Johnny Ho, and Andy Konwinski, he co-founded Perplexity AI — a company designed to reimagine search not as a static index of links, but as a dynamic, conversational interface powered by real-time data.
What students can learn from Srinivas
For the students who listened at Oxford, and indeed for millions more watching from afar, Srinivas embodies a new archetype of the technologist-scholar: rigorous in his training, unafraid of risk, and grounded in the humility of constant learning. His story carries lessons that transcend borders and disciplines.
Lifelong curiosity as currency
His reminder that education does not conclude with a degree is a clarion call to students everywhere.
The world is evolving too quickly for knowledge to be static. To remain relevant, one must cultivate an attitude of relentless inquiry.
The courage to be audacious
A $34.5 billion bid for Chrome from a $14 billion company is not merely about financial arithmetic. It is about the willingness to challenge entrenched systems and ask questions others dismiss as impossible. For students, it illustrates that audacity is not recklessness when paired with vision.
Resilience in the face of giants
Srinivas's trajectory reminds us that history is shaped not by those who fear failure but by those who attempt the improbable. His journey demonstrates that even in ecosystems dominated by tech titans, there is space for new challengers to redefine the rules.
Global pathways, local roots
From Chennai to Berkeley, Srinivas's ascent reflects how intellectual rigour in one corner of the world can ripple into global influence. For young learners, it underscores the importance of embracing international perspectives without losing the grounding of one's origins.
Beyond the bid: A philosophy of disruption
Whether or not Perplexity AI ever acquires Chrome, Srinivas has already achieved something greater: He has forced the global conversation to reckon with the inevitability of disruption. His company's launch of Comet, an AI-powered browser, signals not just competition but reinvention, the possibility of an internet where the barriers between user queries and knowledge dissolve in real time.
And yet, beyond the numbers and valuations, what lingers most is the ethos he shared at Oxford. In a world intoxicated by short-term gains and immediate gratification, Srinivas's insistence on lifelong learning offers a refreshing reminder: the true foundation of innovation lies not in acquisitions or valuations, but in the minds that refuse to stop asking questions.
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