Intelligence has become one of the most used words of this decade. It appears in every technology brief, every leadership conversation, every policy debate. But rarely does it stop to examine itself.

That gap is exactly what Love Tomorrow Summit 2026 is built around. The Future of Intelligence is the central theme of the day. And its clearest expression, the moment where it becomes something more than a concept, is the evening show.

The evening show is its own format. After a full day of keynotes, conversations, and connections on the magical grounds of Tomorrowland, the evening shifts the experience into something harder to describe but immediately felt. Ideas land differently when they share space with music, light, and an audience that has spent the day thinking together. It is not a closing ceremony. It is the culmination.

Three speakers have been confirmed for the Future of Intelligence evening show. Each approaches intelligence from a distinct angle. Together, they open up the full scope of what the theme actually holds.

Mo Gawdat

Mo Gawdat spent nearly three decades at the frontier of technology. As former Chief Business Officer for Google X, he shaped strategy for some of the most ambitious innovation projects of the recent era and helped launch nearly half of Google’s global operations. His 2021 book, Scary Smart, mapped the trajectory of artificial intelligence before the ChatGPT revolution made those questions unavoidable for everyone.

His focus for the evening: what happens when the systems humans create become smarter than the humans who built them? It is a question that sounds like speculation until it does not. Mo Gawdat is one of the few people positioned to answer it without simplifying it.

Dr. Christine Webb

Not all intelligence is artificial. And not all insight about intelligence comes from technology.

Dr. Christine Webb is an Assistant Professor at New York University’s Department of Environmental Studies, where her research examines the social lives of animals: how they navigate disruption, form bonds, and process emotional experience. Her work does something rare in science. It turns the lens on the observer. The ways humans study animal cognition reveal at least as much about human assumptions as they do about the animals themselves.

In a programme about the future of intelligence, her presence asks the question behind the question: whose definition of intelligence has been informing the conversation, and what might be missing because of it?

Caroline Lair

Caroline Lair is the founder of The Good AI and co-founder of Women in AI, a nonprofit organisation with nearly 15,000 members across more than 100 countries. Her work bridges technology, the social sciences, and knowledge systems that long predate the language of optimisation and scale.

Her central provocation: if artificial intelligence reflects the values of those who build it, what changes when it is built with consciousness rather than speed? It is a question that sits at the heart of almost every live debate in technology right now. And it is one she approaches with the depth of someone who has spent years building actual alternatives.

More speakers will be confirmed in the weeks ahead.

The Future of Intelligence evening show takes place on 23 July 2026 at Tomorrowland, Boom, Belgium. It is part of a full day that brings together 80+ speakers and artists, combining keynotes, curated networking, music, and experience.

Tickets for Love Tomorrow Summit 2026 are at lovetomorrow.com/love-tomorrow-summit/tickets