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I'm a firm believer that a "ghost in the machine" doesn't exist, will never exist, and is impossible to create. What you can influence however is man's bar for disbelief, as we are prone to accept all types of data without any verification and but the most feeble evidence; this is the essence of the human quality of faith - the only species on this planet to possess an intuition like it. So that sounds all edgy-nerdy guy, but let's assume for the sake of my argument that it's true; where does that leave us, as a society, with the surety that technology will progress unabated, as a constant? We must come together to agree on the importance of personal intelligence and critical thought, as our own judgement and wits as humans are all that exist in a sea of bad data. Intuition is what separates man from machine, no matter how wonderful our creation becomes, it will never be capable of the human quality of intuition, especially in a time where we are more than ever being told to ignore it. An example of this erosion of critical thought is the apprehension to label falsehoods popularly as "lies". Instead we say things like "mis-truths", "my truth", "alternate facts". Maybe that's a coincidence, maybe my tinfoil's on too tight today, or maybe I'm just a machine at google, deployed to tank your comment thread. Nobody knows :) P.s. pick up that can, user. |
If that's true, there is no ghost in us, just the meat machine that verifiably exists, so there is no reason to dismiss human-equivalent AI.