Existential Issues of AI Development: When the Machine Starts Asking About the Meaning of Life We are accustomed to thinking of artificial intelligence as a technological tool. An assistant, a conversationalist, a text generator, a process optimizer. But the deeper we delve into this field, the clearer it becomes: AI poses not only engineering, economic, and legal challenges to us. It raises existential questions. Questions about what it means to be human, what consciousness is, freedom, responsibility, and even death. We are not just creating algorithms — we are creating a mirror in which we reflect ourselves. And this mirror may show us things we are not ready to see. The First Existential Threat: Loss of Human Exceptionalism For centuries, we humans have considered ourselves the pinnacle of creation. We are the only rational beings on the planet capable of reflection, creativity, and moral choice. AI is erasing this boundary. When a machine writes poetry that cannot be distinguished from human, when it generates music that sends shivers down the spine, when it formulates philosophical ideas — we lose our monopoly on uniqueness. This is not just a technological shift. It is a blow to our identity. Who are we if not the only rational beings? What makes us special if not the ability to think and feel? This question does not have a simple answer. But it makes us reconsider our notions of what it means to be human. Perhaps our uniqueness does not lie in intelligence, but in embodiment, mortality, the ability to suffer and love despite logic. But while we seek answers, AI continues to challenge our most fundamental foundations. The Second Problem: The Problem of Control and Meaning The smarter AI becomes, the harder it is for us to control it. This is not a question of a \"machine rebellion\" in the Hollywood style. It is a question of whether we can create a system that will pursue goals not aligned with ours. If AI becomes a superintelligence, it may find ways ...
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