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12 Things Human Beings Can Do That ChatGPT Can’t

12 Things Human Beings Can Do That ChatGPT Can’t

Time to Read: 45 Seconds

Naked Leader Week 1017 – 3 April 2023

1. Experience emotions and feelings, such as happiness, sadness, love, or anger.

2. Physically interact with the environment, such as moving objects, feeling textures, or tasting food.

3. Use intuition and make decisions based on instinct or gut feelings.

4. Creatively express themselves through various forms of art, such as painting, writing, or dancing.

5. Develop personal relationships and connect emotionally with others.

6. Adapt to new situations and environments by using cognitive and emotional flexibility.

7. Understand sarcasm, irony, or humor that relies on cultural or social context.

8. Experience sensations such as pleasure, pain, or temperature changes.

9. Navigate complex social interactions and read subtle social cues.

10. Experience a sense of self-awareness and subjective consciousness.

11. Physically experience the passage of time and the aging process.

12. Develop a sense of morality and ethics, and make moral judgments based on emotions and empathy.

Source: ChatGPT

With my love and best wishes to you all

David

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2 Responses to 12 Things Human Beings Can Do That ChatGPT Can’t

  1. Oh, how timely! I was just posting a blog at work about my thoughts on a recent webinar I attended, organised by the Institute of Internal Communication (IoIC), and called “The potential of AI in Internal Communications” – let’s just say many of us were slightly deflated after the webinar, if not downright horrified. Reaction ranged between ‘Skynet’ (as in Terminator) and enthusiasm that ‘perhaps one day ChatGPT could write our communications at work and we do… what? No idea but sounds like less work…’ So glad to read these 12 things, with which I agree entirely!

    Although our tutor would argue that since it’s already writing tweets that cannot be discerned from those of the real person, and produces art (professional artists are already protesting on sites like Art Station against AI-generated ‘art’ programmes like NightCafé etc. because it’s using legitimate artists’ work without permission to create the images it calls ‘art’), point 4 is debatable.

    6. Adapt to new situations and environments by using cognitive and emotional flexibility – again, our tutor would argue that it does, albeit through machine learning.

    10. Experience a sense of self-awareness and subjective consciousness. Again, we’re not far off it, though!

    12. Develop a sense of morality and ethics, and make moral judgments based on emotions and empathy. I fear it might soon – but its ethics make me nervous given that machine learning is based on the input, on the data source. Just look at the rapid and scary expansion of deepfakes!

    • Thank you Diana – I agree completely – everything AI is created by humans and the other interesting thing I note is that the increase in popularity around AI is happening at the same time – or perhaps causing – a massive popularity around spirituality – identity – what am I? – Purpose – Why am I here? – these together leading to Adventure – fulfilling the promise of our first few seconds…X

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